Chris Robley & The Fear of Heights
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General Info
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Genre: Folk / Indie / Pop
Location PORTLAND, Oregon, US
Profile Views: 87818
Last Login: 7/26/2012
Member Since 5/11/2005
Website http://www.chrisrobley.com
Record Label Cutthroat Pop Records
Type of Label Indie
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Bio
.. ...... .. .. .. .. .. ......Chris Robley & the Fear of Heights- Centaurea.. from ..Chris Robley.. on ..Vimeo... .... ..Chatter...... (Re: Movie Theatre Haiku) This gothic, orchestral indie-pop is sure to leave heads spinning with its unique and haunting sound... -NPR's Second Stage.... After being impressed with Chris Robley's 2005 debut, This Is The, and by his work with sometime band the Sort-Ofs and other projects, I took last year's terrific baroque-pop album, The Drunken Dance of Modern Man in Love, to be something close to the full flowering of his songwriting and production gifts. This paper duly dubbed it one of 2007's finest local discs. With Movie Theatre Haiku, his first release sharing billing with his support band the Fear of Heights, Robley's only gotten better: more confident both vocally and in the realization of his seemingly endless stream of musical and production ideas... "These songs have serious legs," I wrote in praise of his previous disc. This album's tunes have teeth. .. -Jeff Rosenberg, Willamette Week.... ..'Movie Theatre Haiku' is masterfully built upon screen stories both wide and small that are begging to be told... -Ezra Ace Caraeff, Portland Mercury.... (Robley) has a challenge to pull off live the densely figured arrangements that grace his current poetic, evocative album, "The Drunken Dance of Modern Man in Love." Trust this multi-instrumentalist to come through... -L.A. Times.... (Drunken Dance) is without a doubt one of the strongest independent releases that has come into my hands this year... -Shawn Kyle. Reax Music.... 'The Drunken Dance of Modern Man in Love' is an unusual, evocative album, both musically varied and tuneful... -All Music Guide..... As subtly composed as fine wine. You know how well-written a song is when you’re not sure why it works; only that you could never write one like it if you tried... It’s clear that Robley’s a major talent, a force to be reckoned with... -The Indie Literati.... Each song is a fully formed vignette that could stand alongside any "Sgt. Pepper" or Queen cut... Looks like these future rock stars paid attention in lit class in college and grew up to be hyper-literate songwriters and pastiche-pretty producers. We'll watch with great interest where the Selzers, Robleys, Wards and Decemberists take us next... -Don Campbell. The Oregonian.... Robley's knack for inspired pop arrangements is astounding, recalling Neutral Milk Hotel, the Beatles and especially Elliott Smith... -John Chandler. Portland Monthly..... Melodic without being precious or over-the-top, sonically eclectic without being disjointed, Drunken Dance plays like a series of intelligent novellas-as-pop-songs. Its pleasures and intrigues are many, and very refreshing... -bullz-eye.com.... His poetic sensibility gives his music a depth and wisdom many young songwriters lack. ..-San Francisco Examiner.... Chris Robley is one of those mad scientists of pop-rock, whose baroque experiments include everything but the kitchen synth... -Tucson Weekly.... Despite themes that include nightmares, night sweats, prostitution, bombed out churches and man's disrespect for nature, the music buoys the spirit... -The Record Searchlight.... Drunken Dance of Modern Man In Love is a bountiful improvement from a debut that was already impressive in its own right. Pick this one up. ASAP... -ObscureSound.com .... The Drunken Dance of Modern Man in Love is nothing short of outstanding in that it mixes and molds so many genres, yet still keeps a cohesive feel. Robley is a fine example of how breaking the boundaries is not only good for music, but essential... -Tim Wardyn. Ink19.... Robley's second coming is even better than the first.... effortlessly literate... -Serena Markstrom. Eugene Register-Guard.... Poetic narratives of death’s shadowy life-affirming presence rise up to greet you... -PopMatters.com.... Criminally "unknown" singer/songwriter Chris Robley is a damned sophisticated standout... -Phoenix New Times.... I can't remember the last time something this artsy didn't annoy the crap out of me, but I guess that's what happens when those rare, golden people who offer substance over self-congratulation make albums. Bless them... - Eugene Weekly.... "this Is the" deserves a place among your Elliot Smith, Badly Drawn Boy, John Lennon, and -- yes, even your Guns 'N Roses albums... -Splendid e-zine.... "this is the" is what John Lennon would be doing today if he wasn't killed a quarter century ago... -music liberation project.... Making creative use of colors from Beatles pop to emo rock to lo-fi indie ache, "This Is The" is definitely unusually abundant in imagination and vision... -Tamara Turner. CD Baby Editor (before I worked there... I promise).... Understated but assured pop abounds on this singer-songwriter's first solo album. High praise in my book but fully warranted. He shows no lack of ambition in his arrangements. Full but never fussy, tasty but biting, familiar but fresh. Ace all around... -Foxy Digitalis.... The album could have ended up being mere studio trickery, but Robley's songs are so strong he could deliver them given just an unamplified acoustic guitar. Robley's singing, at his most urgent, recalls Lennon's desperate-yet-melodic rasp, but it's evident he's not posturing to achieve the sound, just slipping comfortably into it like a pair of vintage Beatle boots that happen to perfectly fit his feet... -Willamette Week (jeff rosenberg).... this is the is impressive, proving that Robley has found his voice, working in the great dissonant pop tradition discovered and delivered by the likes of John Lennon, Bruce Springsteen and Elliott Smith. Live, with his orchestra, though, Robley's songs bloom... -Willamette Week (Mark Baumgarten).... Left-of-the-dial enough to entice indie-rock fans over into the singer-songwriter world... Robley shakes things up so you never know what to expect, while keeping things tied together enough to make a cohesive album in a bed of experimentation... -Alex Steininger. In Music We Trust.... Chris Robley is a unique musical talent. Hell, I'll say it: He's a genius. True to form, his set last night was full of lush instrumentation, beautiful arrangements, and simply the best pop hooks. Check out Chris next time he plays or go out and buy "This is the..." You can thank me later... -Casey at X58Radio.com.... Though his acid wit and precarious song writing is compared with John Lennon, Robley is no Lennon pastiche... His songs are seldom depressing, though sometimes dark, and constructed with an intimate honesty... -S.A. Life. Australia. Chris Clark.. .. ....Tale Telling...... Portland busy-boy Chris Robley (the "Stephen King of Indie-Pop") has previously released 2 critically lauded solo albums, "this is the" and "the drunken dance of modern man in love," both produced with Adam Selzer (M. Ward, The Decemberists, Laura Gibson). His third, "Movie Theatre Haiku" was produced with the help of Portland audio-fiends Mike Coykendall, Jeff Stuart Saltzman, and Rob Stroup. It will see a national release in February, 2009, though it is available now at shows and on CD Baby.....The album upholds Robley's reputation for writing story-songs about characters that find themselves in heartbreak and despair. But "Movie Theatre Haiku" also finds him taking his trademark blend of fractured folk and dark, psychedelic indie-pop into more ambitious orchestral and electronic territory.....Touring often, Robley performs his eclectic and hyper-literate psych-folk-indie-pop compositions with backing band The Fear of Heights, a sheets-of-sound arkestra of doom that swings and swells in size from 4 to 11 members including horns, flutes, and strings.....He also fronts the agit-prop-prog-pop outfit THE SORT OFs whose much praised 2006 debut "Anxiety on Parade" detailed the human waste of the post-modern political landscape.....In his spare time he's been known to fill the role of multi-instrumentalist with The Imprints, Norfolk & Western, and Rachel Taylor Brown. He's also appeared as a session player on over a dozen releases and recently produced Little Beirut's sophomore effort "High Dive". He enjoys full contact banking, circuit bending, and watching Battlestar Galactica with his wife Kristiana. Much to their dismay, their cat Fellini is a big fan of Jason Mraz......... -
Members
..the most frequently touring Fear of Heights include..:.... Chris Robley- songs, guitar, keyboard, samples, vocals.. John Stewart- drums, percussion, vocals.. Arthur Parker- upright, electric, and synth bass, vocals.. Daniel Adlaf- trumpet, keyboards, glocenspiel.... ..previous members and occasional guests:...... Rachel Taylor Brown- piano, pianette, accordian, vocals.. Ben Landsverk- viola, vocals, percussion.. Peter Swenson- drums, percussion.. Benny Morrison- barritione and tenor sax, clarinet, flute.. Tim Huggins- bass.. James Gregg- trumpet.. Drew Norman- guitar, banjo.. Steve Keeley- violin, vocals.. Dan Mills- guitar.. Joshua Brookoff- guitar.. Amanda Lawrence- viola.. Rob Stroup- guitar, vocals.. Robert PeArt- guitar.. Kelly Meyer- Viola.. Zach "Pony" Domer- bass.. The Flote Flute Quartet- ahh, flutes. .. -
Influences
The same as yours, I'm sure. -
Sounds Like
John Lennon, John Vanderslice, Grandaddy, Badly Drawn Boy, Nilsson.... ..Chris Robley & the Fear of Heights: ..movie theatre haiku.... .......... ....Chris Robley: ..The Drunken Dance of Modern Man in Love.... ..............Chris Robley: ..this is the....................THE SORT OFs: ..Anxiety on Parade................
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9 Songs | Aug 1, 2010
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Bio:
..Chris Robley & the Fear of Heights- Centaurea from Chris Robley on Vimeo.
Chatter
(Re: Movie Theatre Haiku) This gothic, orchestral indie-pop is sure to leave heads spinning with its unique and haunting sound.
-NPR's Second Stage
After being impressed with Chris Robley's 2005 debut, This Is The, and by his work with sometime band the Sort-Ofs and other projects, I took last year's terrific baroque-pop album, The Drunken Dance of Modern Man in Love, to be something close to the full flowering of his songwriting and production gifts. This paper duly dubbed it one of 2007's finest local discs. With Movie Theatre Haiku, his first release sharing billing with his support band the Fear of Heights, Robley's only gotten better: more confident both vocally and in the realization of his seemingly endless stream of musical and production ideas... "These songs have serious legs," I wrote in praise of his previous disc. This album's tunes have teeth.
-Jeff Rosenberg, Willamette Week
'Movie Theatre Haiku' is masterfully built upon screen stories both wide and small that are begging to be told.
-Ezra Ace Caraeff, Portland Mercury
(Robley) has a challenge to pull off live the densely figured arrangements that grace his current poetic, evocative album, "The Drunken Dance of Modern Man in Love." Trust this multi-instrumentalist to come through.
-L.A. Times
(Drunken Dance) is without a doubt one of the strongest independent releases that has come into my hands this year.
-Shawn Kyle. Reax Music
'The Drunken Dance of Modern Man in Love' is an unusual, evocative album, both musically varied and tuneful.
-All Music Guide.
As subtly composed as fine wine. You know how well-written a song is when you’re not sure why it works; only that you could never write one like it if you tried... It’s clear that Robley’s a major talent, a force to be reckoned with.
-The Indie Literati
Each song is a fully formed vignette that could stand alongside any "Sgt. Pepper" or Queen cut... Looks like these future rock stars paid attention in lit class in college and grew up to be hyper-literate songwriters and pastiche-pretty producers. We'll watch with great interest where the Selzers, Robleys, Wards and Decemberists take us next.
-Don Campbell. The Oregonian
Robley's knack for inspired pop arrangements is astounding, recalling Neutral Milk Hotel, the Beatles and especially Elliott Smith.
-John Chandler. Portland Monthly.
Melodic without being precious or over-the-top, sonically eclectic without being disjointed, Drunken Dance plays like a series of intelligent novellas-as-pop-songs. Its pleasures and intrigues are many, and very refreshing.
-bullz-eye.com
His poetic sensibility gives his music a depth and wisdom many young songwriters lack.
-San Francisco Examiner
Chris Robley is one of those mad scientists of pop-rock, whose baroque experiments include everything but the kitchen synth.
-Tucson Weekly
Despite themes that include nightmares, night sweats, prostitution, bombed out churches and man's disrespect for nature, the music buoys the spirit.
-The Record Searchlight
Drunken Dance of Modern Man In Love is a bountiful improvement from a debut that was already impressive in its own right. Pick this one up. ASAP.
-ObscureSound.com
The Drunken Dance of Modern Man in Love is nothing short of outstanding in that it mixes and molds so many genres, yet still keeps a cohesive feel. Robley is a fine example of how breaking the boundaries is not only good for music, but essential.
-Tim Wardyn. Ink19
Robley's second coming is even better than the first.... effortlessly literate.
-Serena Markstrom. Eugene Register-Guard
Poetic narratives of death’s shadowy life-affirming presence rise up to greet you.
-PopMatters.com
Criminally "unknown" singer/songwriter Chris Robley is a damned sophisticated standout.
-Phoenix New Times
I can't remember the last time something this artsy didn't annoy the crap out of me, but I guess that's what happens when those rare, golden people who offer substance over self-congratulation make albums. Bless them.
- Eugene Weekly
"this Is the" deserves a place among your Elliot Smith, Badly Drawn Boy, John Lennon, and -- yes, even your Guns 'N Roses albums.
-Splendid e-zine
"this is the" is what John Lennon would be doing today if he wasn't killed a quarter century ago.
-music liberation project
Making creative use of colors from Beatles pop to emo rock to lo-fi indie ache, "This Is The" is definitely unusually abundant in imagination and vision.
-Tamara Turner. CD Baby Editor (before I worked there... I promise)
Understated but assured pop abounds on this singer-songwriter's first solo album. High praise in my book but fully warranted. He shows no lack of ambition in his arrangements. Full but never fussy, tasty but biting, familiar but fresh. Ace all around.
-Foxy Digitalis
The album could have ended up being mere studio trickery, but Robley's songs are so strong he could deliver them given just an unamplified acoustic guitar. Robley's singing, at his most urgent, recalls Lennon's desperate-yet-melodic rasp, but it's evident he's not posturing to achieve the sound, just slipping comfortably into it like a pair of vintage Beatle boots that happen to perfectly fit his feet.
-Willamette Week (jeff rosenberg)
this is the is impressive, proving that Robley has found his voice, working in the great dissonant pop tradition discovered and delivered by the likes of John Lennon, Bruce Springsteen and Elliott Smith. Live, with his orchestra, though, Robley's songs bloom.
-Willamette Week (Mark Baumgarten)
Left-of-the-dial enough to entice indie-rock fans over into the singer-songwriter world... Robley shakes things up so you never know what to expect, while keeping things tied together enough to make a cohesive album in a bed of experimentation.
-Alex Steininger. In Music We Trust
Chris Robley is a unique musical talent. Hell, I'll say it: He's a genius. True to form, his set last night was full of lush instrumentation, beautiful arrangements, and simply the best pop hooks. Check out Chris next time he plays or go out and buy "This is the..." You can thank me later.
-Casey at X58Radio.com
Though his acid wit and precarious song writing is compared with John Lennon, Robley is no Lennon pastiche... His songs are seldom depressing, though sometimes dark, and constructed with an intimate honesty.
-S.A. Life. Australia. Chris Clark
Tale Telling
Portland busy-boy Chris Robley (the "Stephen King of Indie-Pop") has previously released 2 critically lauded solo albums, "this is the" and "the drunken dance of modern man in love," both produced with Adam Selzer (M. Ward, The Decemberists, Laura Gibson). His third, "Movie Theatre Haiku" was produced with the help of Portland audio-fiends Mike Coykendall, Jeff Stuart Saltzman, and Rob Stroup. It will see a national release in February, 2009, though it is available now at shows and on CD Baby.
The album upholds Robley's reputation for writing story-songs about characters that find themselves in heartbreak and despair. But "Movie Theatre Haiku" also finds him taking his trademark blend of fractured folk and dark, psychedelic indie-pop into more ambitious orchestral and electronic territory.
Touring often, Robley performs his eclectic and hyper-literate psych-folk-indie-pop compositions with backing band The Fear of Heights, a sheets-of-sound arkestra of doom that swings and swells in size from 4 to 11 members including horns, flutes, and strings.
He also fronts the agit-prop-prog-pop outfit THE SORT OFs whose much praised 2006 debut "Anxiety on Parade" detailed the human waste of the post-modern political landscape.
In his spare time he's been known to fill the role of multi-instrumentalist with The Imprints, Norfolk & Western, and Rachel Taylor Brown. He's also appeared as a session player on over a dozen releases and recently produced Little Beirut's sophomore effort "High Dive". He enjoys full contact banking, circuit bending, and watching Battlestar Galactica with his wife Kristiana. Much to their dismay, their cat Fellini is a big fan of Jason Mraz.
Member Since:
May 11, 2005Members:
the most frequently touring Fear of Heights include:Chris Robley- songs, guitar, keyboard, samples, vocals
John Stewart- drums, percussion, vocals
Arthur Parker- upright, electric, and synth bass, vocals
Daniel Adlaf- trumpet, keyboards, glocenspiel
previous members and occasional guests:
Rachel Taylor Brown- piano, pianette, accordian, vocals
Ben Landsverk- viola, vocals, percussion
Peter Swenson- drums, percussion
Benny Morrison- barritione and tenor sax, clarinet, flute
Tim Huggins- bass
James Gregg- trumpet
Drew Norman- guitar, banjo
Steve Keeley- violin, vocals
Dan Mills- guitar
Joshua Brookoff- guitar
Amanda Lawrence- viola
Rob Stroup- guitar, vocals
Robert PeArt- guitar
Kelly Meyer- Viola
Zach "Pony" Domer- bass
The Flote Flute Quartet- ahh, flutes.
Influences:
The same as yours, I'm sure.Sounds Like:
John Lennon, John Vanderslice, Grandaddy, Badly Drawn Boy, NilssonChris Robley & the Fear of Heights: movie theatre haiku
Chris Robley: The Drunken Dance of Modern Man in Love
Chris Robley: this is the
THE SORT OFs: Anxiety on Parade

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Sandy Zacky 2 years ago
Sedative Boy(New Tracks… 2 years ago
Redwood Son 2 years ago
Little Beirut 2 years ago
John 3 years ago
SisT 3 years ago
Turnpage Hey Chris, thanks for the befriending! I listen to the CD Baby Podcast, which was how I found out about yourself...Love the show! I didn't realise the intro song was yours, kickass! Anyways, all the best, hope to hear back from you! Jimmy
3 years ago
Aaron Bowen 3 years ago
Pioneer Music Co 3 years ago
Panayotis Terzakis 3 years ago
10 of 409MoreHave a great week : )
Best Wishes,
Sandy
Love your songs Chris! Been a fan since I lived in South Florida. I play an acoustic set around Portland alot and would love to share a bill with you sometime!
Good to meet cha' in person yesterday (finally) and I am a big fan dude!
See ya around the way
j
Coming soon, my man, don't you worry!!!
Hi!!! Nice work... good luck!!!
sounds great! ;)
Yo when are you coming down again?
Thanks for the friendship! Stop in and see us sometime!
Take care,
Pioneer
Thank you for the add! Have a good summer!