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BATTLE AVE

by battle ave.

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eggbot_ This record is dog crap but I loved going to Kingston South Cuties so much that I listened to it. Honestly, I also liked Angels Den and Gimme Dollars as well, but Kingston South Cuties was far superior. The women were the same, but the management was better. Favorite track: kingston south cuties.
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1.
my year with the wizard was a long one / you act like a friend, but you’re the wrong one i call on the phone, i need an answer / why don’t you want the truth? my year with the devil was a sad one / you look for yourself inside a bad one and everyone knows that this is nowhere / how do you sleep at night? my year with the lovers wasn’t worth it / i asked for too much, i think i cursed it i asked for the kill, but not the question / what do you want from me?
2.
fear of 03:58
what is my mind? / not a bird trapped on a wire / not a lazy rolling river / when i wake up, i am cold and shivering / if you’ve got time to scream into my window / in dreams and in a dream i’ve got to sleep with one eye open / i can see the knives, “i want to be alive” echoing in my mind / every day, i gaze out of the window / in fear of
3.
4.
cell 02:41
sewn together / endless summer / i'm dreaming of that / lonely meadow / but I love my honey / she take me to it / dream is only / what you make it I lost myself all by myself I lost my cell all by myself
5.
and my heart / i can't stop it from falling all apart / woke up in a parking lot / coil around my rocks i'm alright / i threw it all into the void last night / blowing out the pilot light i've been dreaming / without feeling / on a straight line / there's no reason can't let go / the little things i didn't know i owned / but how could i begin to know? how can something / come from nothing? / i will love you / without reason there there can't there can't be there can't be love there can't be love in there can't be love in everything

about

In the six years since Battle Ave’s last release, Year of Nod, the Hudson-Valley based band have navigated fatherhood, graduate school, new members, and the cancer diagnosis of drummer Samantha Niss . Now, they’re ready for a reintroduction. Originally formed in 2009 by Niss and guitarist/vocalist Jesse Doherty, the group connected over their love of ambient arrangements, orchestral epics, and the ramshackle indie-rock of the early 90’s. Armed with more experience than ever before, their new self-titled EP expertly stitches together these influences through an intuitive shared language. It’s the kind of creative collaboration that can only exist through sustained friendship and trust.

Battle Ave was largely recorded and arranged remotely, with Doherty describing it as “like a game of Exquisite Corpse… the band mostly cobbled their parts together without knowing what anyone else was going to do.” This resulted in the EP’s dense melodic haze. On opener “My Year With The Wizard,” moody, distorted guitars and piercing drums are juxtaposed with a bright indie-pop chorus, as Doherty considers the transience of friendship and the danger of forgetting yourself in your relationships. “Fear Of” sees sustained pedal-steel wails and a bright, waltzing piano craft a stage for Doherty’s beautifully lethargic vocals, while the meditative, instrumental kaleidoscope “Kingston South Cuties” functions as both intermission and palate cleanser.

The second half of the EP starts with “Cell,” a surging, existential call into the void, with Doherty lamenting “I lost myself all by myself” as the music careens chaotically forward. At almost eight minutes, the closing track “There Can’t Be Love” pieces together a patchwork of lo-fi arrangements underneath stirring guest vocals from And The Kids’ Hannah Mohan, creating a celestial instrumental blanket that morphs into a poignant acoustic finale. Doherty’s persistent final refrain—“there can’t be love in everything”—becomes a coda for the EP as a whole, which is focused on the importance of critically interrogating your life and everyone whom you share it with.

Battle Ave is a wizened throwback to various beloved cult catalogues which manages to shake off any nostalgic fog and avoid anachronism by employing a detailed focus on the here and now. The EP quietly points to the effort it takes to keep going, and the work it takes to be tender towards even our most intrusive thoughts. The band crafts an evocation of the human experience that is characterized by determination, strength and wonder. “We were gone for six years,” Doherty says. “But that doesn't mean we were dead.”

words by Sammy Maine

credits

released October 8, 2021

tracks 1 & 2 engineered, mixed, produced by peter naddeo
at home, kingston, ny
tracks 3, 4, & 5 engineered, mixed, produced by kevin s mcmahon
marcata recording, new paltz, ny
mastered by kevin s mcmahon
art by gabriel chalfin-piney
lettering by mike brown

battle ave is: john burdick, jesse doherty, peter naddeo, samantha niss, adam stoutenburgh

hannah mohan (and the kids) sings on "there can't be love"

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