There are artists and poets in our midst. And sometimes their collaboration can reinvigorate their best muses. Like painters experimenting with new color palettes, Steve Kilbey and Jeffrey Cain have created unique beauty. Two of alt-rock's most influential unsung heroes, The Church's Kilbey and Remy Zero's Cain, have created a masterpiece on opposite sides of the world without stepping into a studio together. The result, Isidore in album title and band name, is a fascinating ten-song (eleven if you include the hidden track) excursion into the layered and textured minds of Kilbey and Cain.
Kilbey, best known for his work in the Australian rock band The Church, whose shimmering song "Under the Milky Way" was a radio staple in the late 80s, has produced a staggering, poetic body of work over a 25-year career. Known for his wordplay in creating songs with lush, melancholic landscapes, Kilbey's solo work has always been even more experimental and textured than his Church work. And now he has found a kindred soul in Cain to help push the creative envelope even further. Cain's band Remy Zero was oft branded as the American version of Radiohead and dared to be moody and poetic even when it was not in current radio playlist fashion.
In their own words, "Isidore is meant to be a musical correspondence, around the world, throughout the heart of matter; an interpersonal relationship with sound; a resounding triumph of beauty; ingenious energies transfixed in time. Music of and from the spheres." This record is for the ambitious among us. While it soars sonically, it is not meant for mere passive listening. The poets expect you to let your imagination roam and participate in Isidore. Upfront and personal, yet gauzy and mysterious, Isidore is an enigma, one that Kilbey and Cain hope you can crack.
Stephen Kilby. Who would of thought little Jeffey would be working with our all time 10th grade idol. Very few people truly know the depth and all those people are all really cool. I am so proud of who you have become or should I say stayed and enhanced. All my love and prayers to you and your family.
So nice to see some still putting poetry into music. Fell in love with Transmigration a few years back - i loved the sound the soaring guitars make toward the very end, as tho' they're both mourning for something; and Musidora is the sweetest thing. Great collaboration; up there with Jack Frost. Beautiful! Jxx
oh and i won't be buying you as a pet with a price on your head. How do you negotiate economics with music like this?
Thank you for the add!! I've been in love with Remy Zero since college... I'm really looking forward to getting to know your newer stuff (and to get to know you for things other than just Remy Zero)!! ^_^