BIO
Bred on the healthy pop influences of XTC
and Richard Davies, Minneapolis' Work of Saws was initially conceived
as a hobby project of singer/guitarist Brock Davis. Using a beat up
tape recorder, Davis began compiling hundreds of one- to two-minute
"songlets" that ran the stylistic gamut, including country-pop vignettes,
playful punk/pop ditties, and Brill Building-inspired pop songs. Beginning
to realize the potential of his copious songs, Davis enlisted the
help of bass player and principal member Dave Salmela, who began augmenting
the material with piano arrangements and backing vocals. Rounding
out the lineup soon after Salmela's addition came guitarist Kurt Froehlich
and drummer Greg Barnell. Davis' prolific songwriting ability and
his penchant for a lo-fi recording style, short songs, oblique titles,
and idiosyncratic lyrics quickly earned the band superficial comparisons
to indie pop heroes Guided By Voices, although their dynamic genre
shifting belied a talent that would defy a relegation to mere copycat
status. Culled primarily from Davis' early tapes, Work of Saws released
their epic largely acoustic 44-song debut album Motivation and Watertower
Grammar in the spring of 2001, to much acclaim from the local and
national indie underground, while their energetic, crowd-pleasing
live shows continued to broaden the band's fan base.
- Bryan Carroll, AMG