![]() MORRIS: Being a little more mature and competent at writing, we can fill the lyrics in a way that fit and add to it instead of making it a song on top of a poem. Because of that, I feel like these are a lot stronger. It starts with the groove and melody, and then we fill everything else into that puzzle. These songs have just started with the most visceral elements. A lot of our songs used to start with lyrics because I’d be bored in class, so I’d sit and write all the lyrics before actually arranging the song. SALPETER: Everything has started with the melody and the beat. It’s cool to be able to pick and choose the direction we’re going to go, instead of being relegated to the amount of half ideas we could come up with and finish. When we used to go into albums, we would have like four-and-a-half songs written, and now we have 30 songs floating around between us. I don’t know if we’re trying to make anyone do anything we’re just trying to make really good music, and so far, it’s working really well. ![]() That was when I was in high school, and I had followed Saves The Day from Can’t Slow Down, Through Being Cool and Stay What You Are, and then all of a sudden they came out with In Reverie and it made me grow up. Not that we sound like that, but as far as that “growth” of the band’s sound. MORRIS: I think people are going to be like, “Wow, this is exciting.” I liken it to when In Reverie came out by Saves the Day or Deja Entendu by Brand New. SALPETER: The truth is a lot more pop, now. If the truth is a little different now, then it’s a little different. I think the goal is to make really true music. We’re not trying to put any boxes on what we’re making. With four years since the last Hush Sound record, what’s the new music sound like? What’s changed? We have new attitudes and new excitement about all of this. At this point, we have eight or nine songs, and we’re hoping to record an EP this winter to release next year. In August, Bob and I got together to write for the first time and within an hour, we wrote what we think is one of our strongest songs. ![]() GRETA SALPETER: We’ve definitely been taking it one step at a time, keeping everything super-natural-well not supernatural: super-natural. We started slowly wading into it, and pretty soon we just decided we should make new music. Those shows made us realize we have this thing that is capable of creating such joy and we wanted to investigate what could happen with it. We saw how much people cared and how much it meant to them. What exactly is going on with The Hush Sound?īOB MORRIS: We played those two nights at the Bottom Lounge, and it was extremely fun and reinvigorated the spirit of the band. The Hush Sound played a few shows in 2010, earlier this year and now you’re out on a mini tour.
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