Eisley is an
indie rock band from Tyler, Texas, consisting of four siblings (Chauntelle, Sherri, Stacy, and Weston DuPree)
and their cousin (Garron DuPree).
The band was conceived in 1997 when lead guitarist Chauntelle and vocalist/rhythm
guitarist Sherri began creating music together in their bedroom. Younger sister
Stacy (who was then eight years old) became frustrated over their insistence
that she was too young to be a part of the band and wrote her own song without
their help before she was inducted as vocalist/keyboardist. Their brother
Weston (who was then 10 years old) soon joined the band as the drummer. Cousin
Garron later replaced the original bassist. Originally called the Towheads, the musicians renamed the band
Eisley after Mos Eisley, a large spaceport town on the planet
Tatooine in the Star Wars saga.
Boyd and Kim Dupree,
the parents of the four DuPree siblings, operated a coffee shop out of their
church. Eisley performed its first show there in 1998 and became the frequent
weekend house band for most of four years. Eisley eventually performed the
local music club circuit and at the shows sold copies of the first of its 10
EPs in 1999.
In their youth, the Dupree siblings recorded darkly
fantastical music and whimsical lyrics with vivid imagery of fireflies, woods, and
open fields. As they reached adulthood, their lives became a soap opera and the
later EPs and albums featured songs about real life, lost love, and troubled relationships.
Chauntelle suffered a broken engagement; her fiancée, Adam Lazara of Taking Back
Sunday, left her shortly before their wedding date after he impregnated a
waitress in the DuPrees' hometown. Sherri endured a failed marriage; her husband,
Chad Gilbert of New Found Glory, cheated on
her, filed for divorce and connected with Hayley Williams of Paramore. The most recent songs are more upbeat, now that all three
sisters are happily married. Chauntelle married guitar maker Todd D’Agostino, Sherri married Max Bemis of Say Anything, and Stacy married Darren King of Mute Math.
Fourth-fifths of the band has recently become new parents. The band's fourth
studio album, 2013's Currents, centered
on this new maturity with nautical/maritime imagery that depicted the constant
movement of the currents, which are sometimes turbulent and other times calm,
but always moving. The metaphor of this current-like flow of time accented the
need for an anchor in order to remain grounded.
At the Bowery
Ballroom tonight, Eisley showed that the band's story is expanding rather
than simply collecting bookmarks. Little of Eisley's performance linked to its
folk-pop fairy-story origin, as the band nurtured a more indie-rocking and
ambient sound. The set included older songs, but the center of gravity was on
newer material that was thematic and even somewhat experimental. These songs
and sounds built an ebb-and-flow atmosphere around the conceptual lyrics, with
seemingly minimal regard for radio potential. Sherri and Stacy alternated lead
vocal duties almost equally, with Chauntelle offering lead vocals on only one
song. The vocals were strong, and lush melodies and crystal clear harmonies were
still a mainstay in the Eisley signature. Sherri and Stacy specialized in
bending and prolonging syllables in almost every line of verse and then filling
out the songs with a lot of audience-rousing woooh-ooohs. Chauntelle rocked the
guitar with dreamy leads and airy riffs while Stacy provided ambient sounds on
her keyboards. Weston pounded driving drum beats and Garron rolled out bass lines
with precision. The rocking arrangements, the brightness engineered by the lyrics
and the indie-style innovations in the compositions, however, made the overall
set sound sweet but somewhat undefined. The wash of sound was sometimes saccharine.
Perhaps part of the Currents theme
was to shift back and forth from driving pop to cascading mind melts.
Visit Eisley at www.eisley.com.

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