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FREE ENERGY




PRESS RELEASE

AOL’s Spinner’s “The Interface” Launched Today!

Continues Tour, Including Pitchfork Festival, Dates with Mates of State & More!


Philadelphia rockers, Free Energy, are featured on AOL Spinner’s “The Interface” starting today! Check out live studio performances of your favorite songs, including “Free Energy,” “Bang Pop,” “C’mon Let’s Dance” and ”Hope Child” along with an exclusive interview with the band. Click HERE to check out the exclusive live videos now!

Free Energy will continue to tour throughout the Summer with more performances w/ Mates of State and stops at Pitchfork Festival and Summer Sonic Music Festival. More tour dates are coming soon!

Produced by DFA’s James Murphy, Free Energy’s debut album, Stuck On Nothing, is out now on Astralwerks/DFA Records. Don’t miss your chance to see what Rolling Stone, Spin, and Alternative Press have all declared as one of the most exciting bands of 2010 live!

For more information and ticket requests contact:

Aleix Martinez – Aleix@girlie.com - 212-989-2222 x136

Sarah Avrin – Sarah@girlie.com - 212-989-2222 x118

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BIO

FREE ENERGY
Stuck On Nothing


Good music emancipates the listener. Boring jobs, troubled relationships, rush hour traffic… such mundane prisons are no match for the liberating power of a fantastic pop song. Think of Stuck On Nothing as one giant stack of “Get Out Of Jail Free” cards.

Propelled by cowbell and carbonated guitars, Free Energy’s eponymous theme song—and debut single—finds front man Paul Sprangers declaring “We’re gonna start a new life, and see how it goes.” Which is exactly what Paul and his songwriting foil, Scott Wells, did when they left St. Paul, MN for new digs in Philadelphia.

Free Energy marks a leap forward from their previous band, indie combo Hockey Night. “Hockey Night was not as focused, a little more reserved,” says the vocalist. By way of contrast, the driving pulse of Free Energy’s “Bang Pop” could jump start a stalled semi-truck, and “Bad Stuff” juxtaposes vapor trail guitars with nimble riffs that rival Thin Lizzy. Snippets of glam, power pop, bubblegum and arena rock all filter into the mix.

Stuck On Nothing is not music for the arms-folded set holding up the back wall. “With Free Energy, the first thing we do is make sure the drums sound awesome,” explains Sprangers. “Then we build on top of that, so everything is solid, well thought out, and distilled to its essence.” The vocals are always audible and up front. Free Energy make singing along just as easy as stamping your feet and clapping in time. “There’s a lot of optimism and positivity in the music, lyrics and imagery,” the singer concedes. Do not resist the exuberance. You can’t stop the children of the revolution.

The ten songs of Stuck On Nothing began life as a string of modest, homemade demos, but only as a jumping-off point. “You can just make little four-track things that are pleasing to listen to, but we’re a rock n roll band, and rock n roll music is supposed to be dance music,” insists Wells. So the band—which also includes Geoff Bucknam, Nicholas Shuminsky, and Scott’s brother, Evan Wells—turned to producer James Murphy of LCD Soundsystem.

“James helped us achieve a big sound that we were unsure of how to realize ourselves,” Sprangers acknowledges. Yet that “big sound” Murphy helped them flesh out is deceptively finessed, too. The unhurried tempo of “All I Know” may evoke Marc Bolan at the height of his arena-filling fame, yet the exhalations of breath that pan back and forth in your ear buds inject a hint of intimacy, too.

Throughout writing and rehearsing, and particularly during recording dates at DFA’s Plantain Studio, Free Energy and their producer took cues from myriad sources, including vintage Juicy Fruit chewing gum commercials and the TV themes of Mike Post. Scott makes no bones about his love of the music for “The Rockford Files” and “Magnum P.I.,” “these really brief, driving songs that have a sustained, cinematic feel to them.” His own fretwork reflects that affection, mixing succinct riffs with the persistent promise of more excitement just ahead.

But unlike many of their young peers, they evoke earlier eras without winking. They don’t stand over a trapdoor marked “irony.” Their originals feel immediate and of-the-now. In part, that contemporary edge is a product of their youth, and an aesthetic forged on the indie rock circuit. It also reflects the circuitous path they took through modern music to arrive at the Free Energy sound.

Believe it or not, Scott had stopped listening to anything “identifiably blues based” by the time he finished middle school. He listened exclusively to punk and hip-hop, before advancing to experimental modern electronic fare like Oval and Fennesz. “I felt like that was where music was at, and you couldn’t do anything else if you wanted to be current.” It wasn’t until college he resumed showing consideration for albums older than he was.

For the swaggering “Dream City,” Scott used the Sweet’s “Blockbuster” as a sonic model. Steve Miller Band, Fleetwood Mac, Tom Petty & the Heartbreakers, and Cheap Trick are all Free Energy favorites, too. “Ultimately, that’s what we’re trying to compete with: The songs you might hear any minute on a corporate classic rock radio station,” admits the guitarist.

And if something didn’t come naturally while recording? They threw out the blueprint and forged ahead. Hence the name, Stuck on Nothing. To their surprise, those three little words had never been used as an album title. Free Energy were happy to rectify that oversight immediately. How could they not? “It just sounds like a rock & roll album,” says Wells. And he should know. Because his band just made a great one.

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RELEASE DETAILS


FREE ENERGY Stuck On Nothing
(DFA Records/Astralwerks)
Release date: May 4, 2010


REVIEWS

“"Free Energy" is an infectious tune, sure to stick with you.”
—Filter Online

“a road-trip-appropriate blast of T. Rex glam complete with hand claps. fuzzed-out riffs and loads of 'na-na-nas'”
—Rolling Stone

“I loved making that record. It was so good to record guitars again. I kind of forgot that I used to be really good at that -- recording guitars.”
—James Murphy

“Classic rock that will make you wish it was warm enough to roll down the windows”
NYLON MAGAZINE ONLINE

“The musical and lyrical wisdom of a veteran rock band's final goodbye, rather than a pop group's nascent beginning”
THE TRIPWIRE

“Free Energy is, in fact, heartbreakingly melodic, toe-tapping, Southern-and-glam-inflected rock for stoners in fact and theory. Fans of Big Star, T-Rex, and getting drunk in rusted-out pickup trucks should get very excited”
POP MATTERS

“...a perfectly tart, semi glammy, Thin Lizzy-style nugget of summery rock'n'rol”
SPIN

“The Philadelphia-based quintet's music-- full of glam-rock guitar leads, teenage boy-girl romance, and new-wave Moog bloops-- is a composite of all things groovy and 1970s.”
PITCHFORK


TOUR DATES

09/10
VANCOUVER, BC
Biltmore Cabaret
09/11
PORTLAND, OR
Doug Fir Lounge/Music Fest Northwest
09/12
SEATTLE, WA
The Tractor Tavern
09/13
BOISE, ID
Neurolux
09/14
SALT LAKE CITY, UT
Kilby Court
09/15
DENVER, CO
Bluebird Theater
09/16
OMAHA, NE
Waiting Room
09/17
MINNEAPOLIS, MN
Triple Rock Social Club
09/18
CHICAGO, IL
Metro
09/19
NEWPORT, KY
Southgate House
09/20
ATLANTA, GA
The Earl
09/21
DURHAM, NC
Duke Coffeehouse
09/22
CHARLOTTESVILLE, VA
Jefferson Theatre
09/23
PHILADELPHIA, PA
First Unitarian Church
09/24
WASHINGTON, DC
Rock and Roll Hotel
09/25
NEW YORK, NY
Webster Hall

AUDIO PLAYER




VIDEOS








DOWNLOADS

Free Energy Hi Res Press Photo (JPG)
Free Energy Lo Res Photo (JPG)
Hi Res 2 (JPG)
Lo Res 2 (JPG)
Free Energy Hi Res Cover Art (JPG)
Free Energy Lo Res Cover Art (JPG)
Press Release: Free Energy Video (DOC)
Press Release: Free Energy (DOC)
Press Release: AOL Free Energy Interface (DOC)
Bio: Free Energy (DOC)
Bang Pop (Fool's Gold REMIX) (MP3)
Dream City (MP3)
Free Energy (MP3)
Dark Trance (MP3)
Hope Child (MP3)
Something In Common (MP3)


LINKS

Free Energy MySpace Page
Follow Free Energy on Twitter