A blend of 60's influenced rock that mixes big rock with psychedelic pop in the vein of Brian Jonestown Massacre, the Beatles, and the Beach Boys. The Village Voice said Rick Bain "..chooses substance over style. Great songs, great hooks."
Rick Bain is back! After a critically acclaimed debut album Crooked Autumn Sun (released in 2000), a sold out nationwide tour with the Dandy Warhols, and several jaunts with the Brian Jonestown Massacre, Portland
Read more on Last.fm …read full bio
A blend of 60's influenced rock that mixes big rock with psychedelic pop in the vein of Brian Jonestown Massacre, the Beatles, and the Beach Boys. The Village Voice said Rick Bain "..chooses substance over style. Great songs, great hooks."
Rick Bain is back! After a critically acclaimed debut album Crooked Autumn Sun (released in 2000), a sold out nationwide tour with the Dandy Warhols, and several jaunts with the Brian Jonestown Massacre, Portland, OR's Rick Bain took time to refocus (both his music and personal life) and ended up with a masterpiece of an album titled Virtual Heavy Pet. Still rooted in the classics like the Beach Boys, The Beatles, and Pink Floyd, this new album is more upbeat, as opposed to the slower psychedelic pop of his previous work. Virtual Heavy Pet starts off with the rockin' "Welcome to My Daydream", a fitting introduction to the CD with Rick's signature swirling organs, catchy guitar riffs, and even a recorder solo thrown in for good measure. It ends strong with one of the album's best songs, "Unchained Anti-Melody". In between these gems is a sonic ride in the rock 'n roll tradition you'd swear was written decades ago.
For a brief background, Rick Bain's notoriety began back in '97 when he took on the difficult task of reproducing the Beach Boys classic Pet Sounds album. Rick chose to record it on his 4-track, in his apartment, without bouncing tracks, and most importantly for the simple pleasure of doing it. Just basic drums, guitar, vocals; all played by himself. This tape got circulated around Portland for some time amongst the music scene, garnering an impressive following of fans. The esteemed recording magazine Tape Op, printed that "Janet Weiss (Quasi/Sleater-Kinney) admitted that Rick's version of "Sloop John B" actually made her like the song. Now that's cool. Take note!"
Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.
User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License and may also be available under the GNU FDL.
…shrink me down again
Update this bio | Artist Bio + Tag FAQs