O.A.R.
''THE ROCKVILLE LP''
JUNE 9 2014
45:19
1 /Two Hands Up
Nathan Chapman / Kevin Kadish / Marc Roberge 3:10
2 /We'll Pick Up Where We Left Off
Nathan Chapman / Blair Daly / Marc Roberge 3:27
3 /Peace
Nathan Chapman / Blair Daly / Marc Roberge 3:36
4 /The Element
Derek A.E. Fuhrmann / Richard On / Marc Roberge 3:08
5 /Favorite Song
Nathan Chapman / Kevin Kadish / Marc Roberge 3:25
6 /So Good So Far
Derek A.E. Fuhrmann / Marc Roberge 3:37
7 /The Architect
Jerry DePizzo / Richard On / Marc Roberge 4:11
8 /Place to Hide
Marc Roberge 4:50
9 /Caroline the Wrecking Ball
Stephen Kellogg / Marc Roberge 6:53
10 /I Will Find You
Danny Chaimson / Chris Culos / Marc Roberge 9:02
Review
by James Christopher Monger (AllMusic)
Of a Revolution's eighth studio long-player and first outing for Vanguard Records, The Rockville LP finds Marc Roberge, Chris Culos, Richard On, Benji Gershman, and Jerry DePizzo returning to their hometown of Rockville, Maryland and reckoning with the emotional complexities that come from enduring an 18-year-long roller coaster ride that has often resulted in keeping family and friends, and even their own wants and needs, at arms length. O.A.R. has always been a band that reveled in the hacky sack inclusiveness of the jam band scene, offering up an easy, melodic, and always danceable infusion of '90s college rock and suburban reggae-pop that fell somewhere between DMB, Rusted Root, Ziggy Marley, and the Goo Goo Dolls, and Rockville is no exception, especially on cuts like "Two Hands Up," "The Architect," and "Favorite Song," the latter a sugary laundry list of willfully nostalgic yet often cringe-inducing pop references paired with wan personal moments ("You're My Stairway to Heaven/You're Freddie Mercury/You got a License to Kill/And, girl it worked for me") framed against the kind of affable, cruise ship-ready melody that has served as the group's m.o. since 1996. That said, the majority of Rockville relies less on the sunny, island pop anthems of the past and more on the past as filtered through the folksy coffeehouse affectations of adulthood, but the band is still incapable of producing anything truly revelatory, remotely maudlin, or even wistful for that matter. Warm and largely acoustic confections like "Peace," "So Good So Far," "Caroline the Wrecking Ball," and "We'll Pick Up Where We Left Off" are undeniably sentimental, yet far too on the nose, both musically and lyrically, to invoke anything stronger than a high five and a faceless sea of raised red Solo cups.
Biography
by Robert Hicks (AllMusic)
O.A.R. (an acronym for the band's full moniker, Of a Revolution) transformed itself from an independent college band to a Billboard chart-topper over the course of a long, varied career. First, two of the band's demo recordings were hawked on university campuses. Then, news spread about the band's roots rock and reggae-inflected songs, which owed much to the jam band genre. Before long, O.A.R.'s website had turned into a highly trafficked Internet destination, and the group gradually left the college scene for the bright lights of national stardom.
Formed in 1996 in Rockville, Maryland, O.A.R. coalesced around lead singer/rhythm guitarist Marc Roberge, lead guitarist Richard On, saxophonist Jerry DePizzo, bassist Benj Gershman, and drummer Chris Culos. Roberge had known Culos since childhood; he also played in local bands with On and Gershman. DePizzo, who hailed from Youngstown, Ohio, met the other Maryland natives at Ohio State, and the band made its studio debut with the release of an independent demo, 1997's The Wanderer. Many of the songs on O.A.R.'s debut disc were written while Roberge and Culos were living in Israel, and the album was recorded on a shoestring budget in Culos' basement.
Two years later, the switch from student band to headlining act began with the arrival of an intensely popular song, "That Was a Crazy Game of Poker," which became a hit on college campuses. The group toured the college circuit as a result, booking shows between classes and encouraging fans to tape each show, which helped spread O.A.R.'s music to a wider audience. O.A.R. then went into the recording studio for a second independent demo, 1999's Souls Aflame, which helped the band land a distribution deal with Alternative Distribution Alliance. By the time Risen appeared in 2001, O.A.R. had earned enough buzz to hire producer John Alagia for the album, which went on to sell 60,000 copies without a major label.
Roberge began writing songs for a new CD later that year. To appease its dedicated fan base, the group issued a popular live album, 2002's Any Time Now, and signed a major-label deal with Lava/Atlantic for the release of 2003's In Between Now and Then. Additional tour dates provided enough material for a second live album, 34th & 8th, and the band began climbing the Billboard charts with 2005's Stories of a Stranger, a studio album that contained a pair of Top 20 Hot AC hits in "Love and Memories" and "Heard the World." A third live offering, the CD/DVD set Live from Madison Square Garden, appeared in 2007.
O.A.R.'s slickest album yet, All Sides, followed in 2008, and the four-disc live set Rain or Shine appeared one year later. Both were quite popular, with All Sides peaking at number 13 on the Billboard charts. Looking to repeat that feat, O.A.R. swung for the fences again with 2011's King, which found the band reuniting with All Sides' producer, Matt Wallace. The CD/DVD Live on Red Rocks, which featured performances culled from their summer tour, arrived in 2012, followed in 2014 by the band's eighth studio long-player, The Rockville LP.
OFFICIAL SITE
''THE ROCKVILLE LP''
JUNE 9 2014
45:19
1 /Two Hands Up
Nathan Chapman / Kevin Kadish / Marc Roberge 3:10
2 /We'll Pick Up Where We Left Off
Nathan Chapman / Blair Daly / Marc Roberge 3:27
3 /Peace
Nathan Chapman / Blair Daly / Marc Roberge 3:36
4 /The Element
Derek A.E. Fuhrmann / Richard On / Marc Roberge 3:08
5 /Favorite Song
Nathan Chapman / Kevin Kadish / Marc Roberge 3:25
6 /So Good So Far
Derek A.E. Fuhrmann / Marc Roberge 3:37
7 /The Architect
Jerry DePizzo / Richard On / Marc Roberge 4:11
8 /Place to Hide
Marc Roberge 4:50
9 /Caroline the Wrecking Ball
Stephen Kellogg / Marc Roberge 6:53
10 /I Will Find You
Danny Chaimson / Chris Culos / Marc Roberge 9:02
Review
by James Christopher Monger (AllMusic)
Of a Revolution's eighth studio long-player and first outing for Vanguard Records, The Rockville LP finds Marc Roberge, Chris Culos, Richard On, Benji Gershman, and Jerry DePizzo returning to their hometown of Rockville, Maryland and reckoning with the emotional complexities that come from enduring an 18-year-long roller coaster ride that has often resulted in keeping family and friends, and even their own wants and needs, at arms length. O.A.R. has always been a band that reveled in the hacky sack inclusiveness of the jam band scene, offering up an easy, melodic, and always danceable infusion of '90s college rock and suburban reggae-pop that fell somewhere between DMB, Rusted Root, Ziggy Marley, and the Goo Goo Dolls, and Rockville is no exception, especially on cuts like "Two Hands Up," "The Architect," and "Favorite Song," the latter a sugary laundry list of willfully nostalgic yet often cringe-inducing pop references paired with wan personal moments ("You're My Stairway to Heaven/You're Freddie Mercury/You got a License to Kill/And, girl it worked for me") framed against the kind of affable, cruise ship-ready melody that has served as the group's m.o. since 1996. That said, the majority of Rockville relies less on the sunny, island pop anthems of the past and more on the past as filtered through the folksy coffeehouse affectations of adulthood, but the band is still incapable of producing anything truly revelatory, remotely maudlin, or even wistful for that matter. Warm and largely acoustic confections like "Peace," "So Good So Far," "Caroline the Wrecking Ball," and "We'll Pick Up Where We Left Off" are undeniably sentimental, yet far too on the nose, both musically and lyrically, to invoke anything stronger than a high five and a faceless sea of raised red Solo cups.
Biography
by Robert Hicks (AllMusic)
O.A.R. (an acronym for the band's full moniker, Of a Revolution) transformed itself from an independent college band to a Billboard chart-topper over the course of a long, varied career. First, two of the band's demo recordings were hawked on university campuses. Then, news spread about the band's roots rock and reggae-inflected songs, which owed much to the jam band genre. Before long, O.A.R.'s website had turned into a highly trafficked Internet destination, and the group gradually left the college scene for the bright lights of national stardom.
Formed in 1996 in Rockville, Maryland, O.A.R. coalesced around lead singer/rhythm guitarist Marc Roberge, lead guitarist Richard On, saxophonist Jerry DePizzo, bassist Benj Gershman, and drummer Chris Culos. Roberge had known Culos since childhood; he also played in local bands with On and Gershman. DePizzo, who hailed from Youngstown, Ohio, met the other Maryland natives at Ohio State, and the band made its studio debut with the release of an independent demo, 1997's The Wanderer. Many of the songs on O.A.R.'s debut disc were written while Roberge and Culos were living in Israel, and the album was recorded on a shoestring budget in Culos' basement.
Two years later, the switch from student band to headlining act began with the arrival of an intensely popular song, "That Was a Crazy Game of Poker," which became a hit on college campuses. The group toured the college circuit as a result, booking shows between classes and encouraging fans to tape each show, which helped spread O.A.R.'s music to a wider audience. O.A.R. then went into the recording studio for a second independent demo, 1999's Souls Aflame, which helped the band land a distribution deal with Alternative Distribution Alliance. By the time Risen appeared in 2001, O.A.R. had earned enough buzz to hire producer John Alagia for the album, which went on to sell 60,000 copies without a major label.
Roberge began writing songs for a new CD later that year. To appease its dedicated fan base, the group issued a popular live album, 2002's Any Time Now, and signed a major-label deal with Lava/Atlantic for the release of 2003's In Between Now and Then. Additional tour dates provided enough material for a second live album, 34th & 8th, and the band began climbing the Billboard charts with 2005's Stories of a Stranger, a studio album that contained a pair of Top 20 Hot AC hits in "Love and Memories" and "Heard the World." A third live offering, the CD/DVD set Live from Madison Square Garden, appeared in 2007.
O.A.R.'s slickest album yet, All Sides, followed in 2008, and the four-disc live set Rain or Shine appeared one year later. Both were quite popular, with All Sides peaking at number 13 on the Billboard charts. Looking to repeat that feat, O.A.R. swung for the fences again with 2011's King, which found the band reuniting with All Sides' producer, Matt Wallace. The CD/DVD Live on Red Rocks, which featured performances culled from their summer tour, arrived in 2012, followed in 2014 by the band's eighth studio long-player, The Rockville LP.
OFFICIAL SITE