The Yelling (formerly Maryandi) were a punk rock band from Los Angeles, California, United States, formed in the spring of 2008 by former Revis members Nathaniel Cox and Robert Davis.[2]
The Yelling | |
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Origin | Los Angeles, California |
Genres | Punk rock, hard rock, noise rock |
Years active | 2008-? |
Labels | Unsigned[1] |
Members | Nathaniel Cox, Robert Davis, Michael Judd, Chris McKee |
Cox and Davis formed the Yelling because they wanted to pursue a new musical direction than they had with Revis,[3] and Davis has said that they went "back to their roots" with the Yelling's establishment.[4] Their musical style has been described as "a polyembryonal gametophyte mutation of Jack White, David Bowie, Angus Young, Cedric Bixler and Ozzy,"[5] and as "a spell-bound vortex of piercing rhythms and serrated amp swells."[6] Many other sources have also stated that their music sounds much like that of the '70s,[6][7] with one reviewer comparing their sound to "Led Zeppelin crash[ing] a Who recording session being produced by Iron Butterfly."[8] They released an EP entitled EP on October 7, 2008,[9] which contained five songs. The last song on the EP, "Blood on the Steps", was featured on Grand Theft Auto IV soundtrack,[10] and on a compilation album issued by Tankfarm Records entitled "Future Sounds 32", released a day after their EP.[11] Billboard wrote that with regard to this song, its "...the thick, fuzzy chords; warbly bass slides; and get-this-party-started intent" "put the bombastic stoner jam in White Stripes territory."[12] Muzikreviews wrote that on their EP, the Yelling "...take their messy, machine-gun sound and blow it up inside listeners’ ears, content to mash an old-school rockabilly format with a fresher razoresque distortion," and compared the EP's sound to that of the early Smashing Pumpkins. The reviewer, Kevin Leidel, awarded the EP a rating of four and a half (out of five) stars.[13] It was widely reported that they were planning on releasing a full length album, entitled "Long Time My Love" (also the second track on their EP), either in April[6] or in the fall of 2009, but while a single, "21st Century Freak," was released, the album never was as the band broke up shortly before its scheduled release date.[14]
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