Artist Profile: The Rushes

Likely heir apparents to the British piano-rock throne, the Rushes’ sound falls somewhere between the Fray and Air Traffic. Now, that sentence alone is probably enough for you to close the page and go back to jacking off to whatever I Guess I’m Floating posted this week, but WAIT - I promise this is actually really good. Better than good, even; their self-titled digital-only debut EP is actually one of my favorite releases of the year.
Featuring four able-bodied vocalists including frontman/guitarist Gerard O’Connell and singer-pianist Dan Armstrong, the Rushes aren’t doing anything terribly new, they’re just doing it really fucking well. O’Connell knows how to use his impassioned, ivory-backed vocals to elicit a significant emotional connection from the listener and said connection is only heightened by Armstrong’s wistful keys work. Basically, this is ideal music for brooding 15 year-olds who omg-just-got-totally-dumped to sneak into their backyards and smoke cigarettes to at night to. That said, these are fucking great pop songs.
“Ripping It Down” is the obvious single and most immediate track of the bunch because, simply put: it’s catchy as shit. Assuming you can get past that incredibly (incredibly) lame 24-second intro, you’re in for a treat: a hyper-addictive chorus, wonderful piano-driven melodies and percussion far superior to that normally found on tracks by bands of their ilk (just wait for that closing drum freak-out at the end). “Will You Won’t You” narrowly edges out “What You Waiting For” as the next best thing here, though both are every bit as good as the A-side (though not as catchy), if not better. All three B-sides come to a distinct emotional climax in which a particularly emotive (and typically fairly cliche) lyric rises above the rest of the verses in an impassioned vocal outburst that generally sums up the entire idea of the song in what appears to have become the Rushes’ signature “moment”, if you will. For example, “Will You Won’t You” revolves around that classic night-out dilemma (Will our protagonist be able to seal the deal with his new love interest?) and the song’s essential climax comes when the instrumentation drops out and all the energy of the track comes to a head with a desperate, “Is it gonna happen?!”. It’s one of the individual highlights of an EP that’s excellent all the way through, with the weakest track - if you can even call it that - coming in the form of “Get The Feeling”, a song that’s nothing to sneeze at in its own right.
Sure, the Rushes will probably go the way of Ghosts and Air Traffic before them after teaming up with a big-shot producer and realizing they could easily access Coldplay-esque stratospheres of fame, but between their debut EP and the tracks on their MySpace (I’m particular, er, taken by “Easily Taken”), there’s more than enough reason to get excited about the Rushes in the meantime.
MP3s:
“Ripping It Down” - The Rushes ((highly recommended))
“Will You Won’t You” - The Rushes ((highly recommended))

September 24th, 2007 at 1:25 am
i still got love
September 24th, 2007 at 7:32 am
yo!
It didn’t fit me really well, though it was OK.
Just a question, where the heck do you find your guys to write about?
September 26th, 2007 at 11:31 pm
“Will You Won’t You” is a superb song, Merci beaucoup
September 27th, 2007 at 8:24 am
and this site used to be so good
September 27th, 2007 at 8:42 am
I <3 Haters
September 27th, 2007 at 12:35 pm
Love the blog… but the last two posts have been Good Weather for Adult Easy Listening. Just saying.
September 27th, 2007 at 2:06 pm
Yeah, ”The Plot” is basically Yanni only less aggressive. And don’t even get me started on Les Savy Fav… I wish they rocked as hard as Kenny G.
September 27th, 2007 at 7:48 pm
Hey gay, i mean jay. how is this adult easy listening! OMG it has a piano!! someone call elton john, he wants his song back, right? No. Although i do understand how you see White Rabbits as adult easy listening. I think I might even hear like a tambourine!! holy smokes! If the fast paced bass line, intense guitar riffs and quick snares dont say adult easy listening, then call me Sally. Very intuitive music analysis you have, Jay.
kisses,
Nicky
September 30th, 2007 at 6:56 am
yeah, sure they’re not ground-breaking. but they’re great pop songs. Very addictive, and great to sing along to!!
October 2nd, 2007 at 1:00 am
Merely referring to the fact that most of this blog’s stuff kicks intense amount of ass, so these M.O.R. Today Show commercial break tracks stick out in their suckiness, but hey, it was only previous greatness that raised my standards so high. And the blog copy is usually fresher than Kenny G references and gay jokes, so I’ll stick around, giving props where due and questioning the rare B.S.
October 5th, 2007 at 2:48 pm
I totally enjoyed The Rushes’ songs. Thanks!
February 2nd, 2008 at 6:53 pm
I saw these guys live from about eight feet away in the National Theatre basement at Iceland Airwaves in ‘05. “Really fucking well” puts it mildly: these guys are passionate about their pop, and they clearly really love what they do. Glad to see they haven’t slipped off the face of the earth in the intervening years.
May 17th, 2008 at 5:39 pm
The Rushes may not be the kinda ‘all in your face’ band we are used to..that’s why I, in particular.. love them/ their music! I particularly LOVE ‘What you waiting for’..heck the amount of times I have watched that on youtube.. I must admit I’m probably responsible for 25% if not more of their views (I like to recommend good music).. Other of their songs I like..hmm ‘Ripping it down’.. naturally enough.. and ‘Stuck in a/the cupboard’ - have you seen the vid of them guys dancing to the instrumental version? hahah worth the watch i must say. Anyway this album is a must-buy, so I’m gonna avoid hypocritea and go buy it tomorrow
oh il be one happy customer