CHAPPO Shares New Single From Upcoming Album DO IT

By: Feb. 02, 2018
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CHAPPO Shares New Single From Upcoming Album DO IT

Brooklyn's CHAPPO return with DO IT, their third studio album and second release on Votiv Music. The album was produced and recorded by John Vanderslice at his studio Tiny Telephone Recording in San Francisco, CA. Bedford + Bowery premiered "White Noise," the second single to be released from the forthcoming album.

"I was feeling overwhelmed with life stuff and the general state of the world. I kept hearing the phrase, 'sound bite play the game, slip up feel the pain' in my head," ecxplains songwriter Alex Chappo. "I had this simple groove in my head and and all these little phrases started popping up. It wasn't until we sprinkled in some snaky tremolo guitars and some distorted bongos that all of a sudden it was one of everyone's favorite songs on the record."

KCRW recently premiered "Cry On Me" and said, "The warm/relaxed yet pristine style from producer John Vanderslice shines through, to ensure that 'Cry on Me' will take its rightful place as a glorious anthem for catharsis."

DO IT find's CHAPPO - the trio of singer Alex Chappo, guitarist Dave Feddock, and and keyboardist Chris Olson - working through multiple traumas by engaging in the creative process of writing and recording an album together.

A series of tumultuous events occurred in succession: the band parted ways with their drummer, Alex's best friend committed suicide, a record was begun and abandoned, and Dave and his wife lost their young son, Winter. In the wake of this period, the remaining three members of the band scattered. The future of CHAPPO seemed bleak. "I think we all realized how delicate and fragile the life of the band was at that time," explains Alex Chappo. "We were acutely aware that at any moment the whole thing could unravel or fall apart."

"Almost immediately after losing our son I had a moment of clarity," says Dave. "It was like, more than ever, all the life and love that was missing needed to come out through the songs we were working on."

The resultant album, DO IT, is a lithe, spangled tumble of a record. Rather than creating a memorial, the band decided to strike nearer to the wild heart of things by paring their sound down to its most primal and joyful components.


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