The Yum Yum Tree presents: Turn Down the Noise
This it indie rock 100% and we loved it
"The world can be so loud that sometimes itâs hard to focus on whatâs important. To me, thatâs making music and art. The song TDTN is my own reminder to myself to turn down the world around me, turn down expectation and just jump in." - Andy Gish
While âturn downâ isnât exactly the sentiment youâd expect a rock band to center an album around, Atlanta, GAâs The Yum Yum Tree encourages just that on their captivating new full-length Turn Down the Noise.
The bandâs first release since Paint By Numbers, hailed by critics as âone of the best Atlanta albums of 2007â (EvilSponge), the new 10-song collection explores a spectrum of relationships, from family and friends who âcall late at night [and] ask for my advice,â to âcomplicated boys,â to those ill-fated romances that you wish to remember just so you âwonât ever want it back.â
These situations set to song urge the listener to navigate through the ânoiseâ of our often messy, confusing, chaotic world, to ultimately arrive at something real and honest. Itâs a mindset that TYYT bassist, singer, and primary songwriter Andy Gish admits didnât come easily.
âWe create so much doubt in ourselves ... by the time I got to the point where I thought, Yes, this is worth recording, a lot of work had gone into the songs,â she reflects, acknowledging that time might have been just what the songs needed for them to so seamlessly coalesce. âIâm a very different person,â Gish explains, âI probably wouldnât have written those songs in 2010; I wouldnât have had the same perspective.â This perspective, she adds, has helped her come to accept a degree of responsibility she may have evaded in the past. âItâs a lot harder to be vulnerable and introspective and put yourself in a place where you accept your own responsibility and still want something good for the other person,â she attests.
Perhaps a by-product of her 20+ years spent as an ER nurse, combined with her work in harm reduction, Gish is likely more comfortable than most when it comes to addressing challenging topics head-on. âThat is where I live,â she laughs. This confidence is evident in the albumâs self-assured, deliberate production as well as such provoking lyrics as âIâll never know unless I tryâ in the title track and âWhat could you accomplish if you werenât afraid to failâ in album standout âFollow You Anywhere.â
Recorded primarily at DAN DIXONâs RCRD studios in Peoplestown-Atlanta, GA, with the exception of a few songs (the catchy singalong âMy Cornerâ and head-bobbing, nostalgic âPorchlightâ with Atlantan Greg Wright, and the aforementioned âFollow You Anywhereâ at PETER GABRIELâs Real World Studios in Box, England), the culmination is a beautiful noise reminiscent, at times, of the best alt-angst of the 90s (think PJ Harvey, The Breeders, or
perhaps a female-fronted Superchunk) and at others a moodier Best Coast or La Sera.
While TYYTâs most obvious musical comfort zone seems to be catchy, guitar-driven bops, the band isnât afraid to turn it down a bitâthe moody and mellifluous âLionâs Heartâ sounds like what might happen if Hope Sandoval guested on a Death Cab for Cutie tune; similarly, the cinematic âWeak at the Kneesâ (which Gish refers to as âone of the first songs I wrote that was really vulnerableâ) sounds tailor-made for an episode of Greyâs Anatomy, building
to a beautiful conclusion that underscores her formidable vocal talents.
Referring to the inspiration for the song, a particularly challenging time in her career during which she was dealt several personal losses nearly simultaneously, Gish explains that she found herself uncharacteristically wearied to the point of questioning her capacity for helping others. âI didnât have anything left,â Gish laments, evidenced by the songâs siren statement: âIf you lean on me, weâre gonna fall tonight.â
Gish points to BrenĂŠ Brown as an inspiration for her vulnerable approach to lyrics, noting that she believes itâs in that uncomfortable space that real conversationsâand changeâ happen. She references also the work of John K. Samson (The Weakerthans) as the metric by which she judges her songwriting, citing specifically his talent for enlivening the mundane and reflecting universality through specificity. Influences notwithstanding, "Turn Down the Noise" is a crystal-clear capture of a band with a distinct, commanding presence and an inspired history, one that reflects the sort of depth and breadth that can only be realized from investing decades in the Atlanta music scene, both as performers and concertgoers. Gish and her bandmates (her husband Matt Harr plays drums; long-time friend John McNicholas, a talented songwriter and YouTube content creator/guitar instructor, rounds out the trio) can often be seen supporting their friendsâ bands at various Atlanta-area venues, so itâs more than fitting that the albumâs liner notes conclude with a mission statement of sorts, encouraging listeners to âmake art, be kind and support independent artists.â
"Turn Down the Noise" connects as it challenges, uncovering more nuance with each listen. It has a way of exuding a comfort with the uncomfortable, remaining introspective without resorting to navel-gazing or overly specific anecdotes. Most remarkably, it reminds us that itâs not only okâitâs essentialâto âremember the bad,â thoughtfully examine the parts of our past we arenât necessarily proud of, and confidently confront the things weâve grown accustomed to not talking about.