When lead vocalist and guitarist Andrew Katz, born in Detroit and raised on theatre, met drummer Charles Garmendia, born in the
Dominican Republic, in a Brooklyn bar, they found they had a common passion for
aggressive music. They jammed with guitarist/keyboard player Matt Menold and bassist Eduardo DuQuesne and formed Clear Plastic Masks in 2011. The band
began performing on the local music club circuit and then expanded its touring
through the midwestern and southern states, eventually stopping for recording
sessions in Nashville, Tennessee, in December of 2011 and April of 2012. The four
musicians found a supportive music scene there, and decided to relocate in late
2012. Clear Plastic Masks' CPM EP was
released in January 2014.
At the Mercury Lounge
tonight, Clear Plastic Masks proved to be a curious band in that the music
escaped classification and defined genres. Just when it seemed like the band
was falling into a niche, the next song would take the band in another
direction. Give the band a label, and within minutes the musicians will tear up
and disintegrate the category. Any attempt to describe the music is going to be
insufficient and incomplete. So, here is my futile attempt to color in what
they sounded like, and it will be inaccurate. As a vocalist, Katz seemed to find
his soul in both singer-songwriter story-songs and Stax-style rhythm and blues,
until he began to shout, at which point he sounded like an early punk rocker. On
several songs, Menold played lead riffs on a keyboard that owed a debt to
classic rock, but then was overpowered by the building garage-rock of the rest
of the band. On other songs, Menold moved to the guitar and played crisp, fluid
licks, while the rest of the band delivered a scrappy grunge. Overall, the
thread that held the adventurous performance together was a raucous and rough, experimental
and explosive rock that was seeking its ground zero in what might have been an
unintentional blues. Disregard everything I wrote, as it is all wrong. Listen
to Clear Plastic Masks' innovative and cutting edge music and whip up your own
description; it will be as inadequate as mine.
The band will perform a record release party at Rough Trade in Brooklyn on May 16, although the band's album will not be released until May 27. Visit Clear Plastic Masks at www.clearplasticmasks.com.

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