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The Year of Acceleration
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The Phoenix Times
The Year of Acceleration
Used To Have a Life
(self-released)

By Serene Dominic

Nov 9, 2006
If Las Vegas can have its homegrown Britpop, why not Tucson? The Killers acclimated us to Yanks and synths again, but The Year of Acceleration is here to say, "What about surliness and passionate songs about the sun never shining and prescription medicine, then?" This is no ironic re-creation of a bygone sound, but exactly what you'd have expected from any puffy-sleeved Europoppers featured in the pages of The Face — so much so that we had to check the skimpy bio to see if these blokes had actually time-traveled and relocated to the desert. But they are homegrown, and the darlings of both garage-band and the NME. The band's stunning self-released debut cracks nary a smile — that'll be your job once you're seconds into "Can I Die To This," the kind of resignation slip that both erotic asphyxiation experimenters and intentional chair kickers can admire. On anyone else's album, a song called "Seaside Lips" might be a reason to smirk, but these guys pull out all the moody spots. You can even imagine the video: singer Christopher O'Gorman slow walking on a beach, moaning about the mouth he misses, the band inexplicably whooshing and swooshing without amplification behind him along the waterline. Then, O'Gorman starts screaming as synchronized waves crash against the whole band, which is still treating it as just another outdoor gig. And somewhere behind the camera, a director wonders where he can work in his signature, slow-motion milk-bottle-crashing shot.

A New Year (of acceleration)
Tucson Weekly
 
The Year of Acceleration may be the biggest band in Tucson. Not in terms of popularity--though they are plenty popular, especially with what we in "The Biz" call "the ladies"---but I'm talking about their sound here. The band sounds as if it were lifted straight from '80s-era Sire Records, all hugely chiming guitars and reverb-heavy dramatic vocals lifted from the Bono playbook ("tragedy" is sung "tragedaaaay"). And while that may be the case with 85 percent of the bands currently taking to stages across this vast country of ours, the fact is that Year principals the O'Gorman brothers have had a similar sound for years now (pun intended), way before The Killers and The Bravery were bitch-slapping each other in the press. The blueprint for The Year of Acceleration's sound was forged in White Chrome Splendor, the Stephen Baldwin-approved, U2-influenced band that the brothers formed, oh, I'd guess about a decade ago. They were '80s in the '90s, when it was still cool to crap on the '80s. They've always had an arena-huge sound, and with The Year of Acceleration they've added darker elements à la The Cure and Echo and the Bunnymen. And now that trends have caught up with them, The Y of A seems to be far more accepted than WCS ever was. More power to 'em for sticking to their guns.
With an attention-grabbing stage presence, The Year of Acceleration have a repertoire of original songs crafted with classic hooks, modern appeal and pop sensibility. They tell stories of love won and lost with the lofty idealism of early U2, the melancholia of Echo and the Bunnymen and the darkness-tinged fun of Factory Records.

After being told that it was their "Year of Acceleration" brothers and founding members Christopher (vocals) and Scott "The Black Cat" (bass) began work on what would become the Year of Acceleration. Josh (drums) and Marcus (guitars) soon followed to complete the lineup.

The Year's self-produced debut LP "Used to Have a Life," has garnered accolades from fans and industry professionals alike. Singles are in regular rotation on radio stations domestically and around the world. Songs such as "Prescription Medicine", "Static On A Record", and "Can I Die To This" have received attention and won awards in such venues as Garageband, Myspace, and NME.

The Year of Acceleration have proven to be just what audiences crave. Thousands of fans are witnessing the genius and broad appeal of The Year. They have been hand picked to share the stage with such acclaimed acts as, OK GO!, Frausdots, Ambulette, West Indian Girl, The Strays, Long-view, and She Wants Revenge.

Contact:
Email: admin@theyeartheband.com
(low res mp3's)

The Year of Acceleration
P.O. Box 57536
Tucson AZ 85732-7536

Instrumentation
Christopher O'Gorman - Vocals, Guitar
The Black Cat - Bass Guitar
Josh Harrison - Drums
Marcus Arvan - Guitar
 
Discography
"Used to have a life" LP - Debut Release - Aug '05
"Sympathies from the shoreline" EP - Forthcoming - '07