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The Technicolors' 'Impostor!' Is a Roll-Your-Windows-Down Tune

By: Jun. 22, 2017
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Phoenix-based band the Technicolors' forthcoming album Metaphysical (out July 7) focuses on "a void"-the one between where its frontman, Brennan Smiley, is, and where he'd like to go. Today we are pleased to premiere "Impostor!," a single from that very LP, which seems to encapsulate this concept. "The song is about everyone's constant need of explanation for everything," says Smiley. "Everyone wants you to explain yourself, tell why you did something a certain way, as opposed to just feelin' it and letting it move you, or maybe challenge you to think differently."

Fittingly for the first day of summer, "Impostor!" is a roll-your-windows-down tune. The guitar intro has a '90s rock grittiness and bite that sets the tone, and next comes Smiley's Julian Casablancas-esque voice-a softer swoon that creates a needed contrast for the song to flow (and makes it ideal to leave on repeat). Smiley says the track started simply with a guitar riff, courtesy of guitarist and vocalist Sean Silverman. The lyrics came later when Smiley was sitting in a unair-conditioned room in the thick of an Arizona summer. He watched an early-2000s "Magic Tricks Revealed" documentary in the guest room of the studio the where the band was recording, and realized he would have to sing "Impostor!" the next morning. He didn't have any lyrics-yet. "I started literally sweating out the most ridiculous lines ever," recalls Smiley. "The last line of the second verse is about making an elephant disappear."

Smiley wrote the lyrics in about five minutes, and the track's guitar riffs ultimately powered Metaphysical as a whole. "We plugged the acoustic guitars straight into this old Neve console that mixed some pretty legendary records, and cranked it till it sounded like what you would imagine if Raiden started a band with Johnny Cage," says Smiley. "I think we stumbled on some wild guitar sounds that have since inspired us to go even further down those roads." - Interview Magazine

find The Technicolors: f a c e b o o k // s o u n d c l o u d // o f f i c i a l //


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