Casting Shadows

Rate It! Avg: 4.0 (55 ratings)
Casting Shadows album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 11   Total Length: 37:33

eMusic Review 0

Avatar Image
Amelia Raitt

eMusic Contributor

Amelia Raitt is a former writer for the television program Mr. Belvedere and has been writing about pop music of all colors and stripes for eMusic since 2005. S...more »

04.22.11
The Black Hollies, Casting Shadows
2008 | Label: Ernest Jenning Record Co. / The Orchard

On Casting Shadows, tri state natives the Black Hollies (featuring former members of Rye Coalition), further develop the psych-y freakbeat sound they debuted on their debut (2006's Crimson Reflections). Kneeling at the Nuggets altar, the album is awash in fuzzed-out guitars and tamborine stomps. Miming the sonic blueprints of the Sonics and Standelles is nothin 'new, but the fluttery vocals of lead man Justin Morey lend a wispiness and delicacy missing from many beat revival acts. Standouts include "Paisley Pattern Ground" and "Running Through My Mind."

Write a Review 4 Member Reviews

Please register before you review a release. Register

user avatar

Not like the Hollies, but like the 60's

mr. mark

Unlike their latest album "Softly Toward The Light", this does not sound much like the original Hollies, but more like the more British-psychedelic garage bands of the 1960's (Small Faces, maybe early Floyd. (The Hollies had their psych period, but they didn't sound like this-ie:King Midas In Reverse.)That said, good stuff. Too bad their CD's are album-length 40 min. Many 60's style groups are stuck to this format, based on the 12 inch Lp/7 Inch 45. Don't know how this stuff resembles the Kinks or Who though.

user avatar

Dancing gladly backwards into tomorrow

SelfRisinMojo

Here's hoping that bands like The Black Hollies and The Chesterfield Kings can continue to produce music inspired by the adventurous side of the sixties rock music scene.These bands understand that the effects don't drive the song, they just make the ride more interesting. The Black Hollies are definately influenced by the English bands...the post Clapton Yardbirds,Kaleidoscope,Tomorrow,The Creation and many others that took the mod sound over the rainbow.

user avatar

Chances are,you're underdressed for this

dmdstrhalo

This comes off as a long-lost mod-pop masterpiece. Unlike a lot of bands that look back for inspiration, there isn't anything tipping their hand here denoting their residence in modern time. This is music for sharp-cut suits and striped mini-skirts. Fans of the Yardbirds, Kinks, Creation, early Who already like it, just download it and confirm it.

user avatar

paisley pattern ground

FENTOOZLER845

I Love this song!! I listened to it like 5 times when I first heard it. Totally awesome!!

Recommended Albums

They Say All Music Guide

With their feet planted in the ’60s and their heads swimming in the clouds, the Black Hollies offer up a second batch of vintage rock & roll with Casting Shadows. These ten tracks will sound familiar to anyone who picked up the band’s Crimson Reflections debut — or, for that matter, anyone familiar with the gritty psychedelia of the Seeds, the Standells, or any act that might’ve played the Electric Circus in 1968. And while fuzzy guitar riffs and vintage tube amps have become customary accessories for many 21st century bands, the Black Hollies sound tighter, grittier, and altogether trippier than most of their retro-minded peers. Casting Shadows doesn’t just borrow from the counterculture era — it lives it, from the “holy moly, I’m so stoned!” cover art to the smart packaging (which borrows its ideas from old vinyl records) to the songs themselves. Tracks like “Bruised Tangerines,” “Hamilton Park Ballerina,” and “The Autumn Chateau” are every bit as kaleidoscopic as their titles suggest, with guitar tremolos and Farfisa organs sharing space alongside the occasional sitar and harmonica. If Casting Shadows aims to be the musical equivalent of an acid trip, then frontman Justin Angelo Morey is the group’s Timothy Leary, leading his three bandmates through blues rave-ups (“That Little Girl”), swampy rock (“Running Through Your Mind,” a close relative to Them’s “Baby, Please Don’t Go”), and all the psychedelic stops in between. Of course, not everyone will love the Black Hollies’ dedication to an era that is possibly older than the band members themselves, and Casting Shadows could very well be criticized as lacking any sort of forward-thinking, modern sensibility. But that’s likely the point, and the Black Hollies make a strong case of remaining stuck in the past. – Andrew Leahey

more »