On the fringe of the indie Rust Belt scene since the 1990s, Moviola has quietly forged a low-key career of high-quality recorded output over twenty-five years, issuing ten (!) records and countless 7-inch singles (including splits with Cobra Verde, Hiss Golden Messenger, Handsome Family and many others). In this artistic continuum, the band has evolved from everything from 4-track fuzz to hi-fi country soul. Today, the band steps forward with Broken Rainbows, its strongest collection of songs to date, written, recorded, and mixed inside the group’s HQ in Columbus. Jake Housh started Moviola in 1993 as a student at “The” Ohio State University as a noisy, fuzzed out lo-fi noisemakers. Over the years, the band has morphed into a unique DIY music and art-making collective with five distinct singers and songwriters, recalling the creatively democratic lineage of The Mekons, The Band, Pink Floyd, many others. Moviola is Jake Housh, Ted Hattemer (Thomas Jefferson Slave Apartments), Scotty Tabachnick, Greg Bonnell, and Jerry Dannemiller. Broken Rainbows is a milestone release, showcasing a band newly energized and assured in its artistry, and supportive of its members’ songcraft. The eleven-song album hovers over a plot of ground that’s optimistic in its despair. Album topics range from the personal to the political, showcasing each member’s unique songwriting within an overall cohesive band aesthetic. “Moviola was one of those groups I met early on back in the day that showed me how to do it. Broken Rainbows is a highlight—pastoral thumpers, fuzzy indie radness, hooks...
LP $16.00
10/08/2021
Over the past decade, Moviola have made six records (and split singles with everyone from The Handsome Family to Cobra Verde) in virtual anonymity in a self-built studio next to the plasma center off North High Street in Columbus, Ohio. Live appearances are rarer than hen’s teeth. An odd assortment of normal Joes from Amarillo to Amsterdam, record shop freaks, librarians who dig Kristofferson, and wayward fans of the Louvin Brothers and Spacemen 3 hold them close like a secret. And viva la difference: in this band everyone writes, everyone takes a turn singing lead. It’s a fiveheaded beast (with eleven kids between them), the result of which is a well-deep collective of dusty country-through-a-space-echo, folk-soul, and adult lullabies. East of Eager ratchets up the entire lot into a pure, uncluttered document of one of the finest bands you’re likely to hear, but, most likely, have never heard. The timeless sounds of soul, pop, country, bluegrass woven into a classic from an ever-evolving American band.
CD $12.00
03/30/2004