NRVS LVRS
San Francisco, CA | Established. Jan 01, 2014 | INDIE
Music
Press
If you like your indie rock fused with dark melodies and sweet synthesizers, the NRVS LVRS are here to satisfy your auditory needs. Vocalist Andrew Gomez says their musical influences include “erotic film scores of the ’60s and ’70s.” It’s hard not to jump on board with a group devoted to meticulous research.
The San Francisco band celebrates the release of its full-length LP, “The Golden West” Thursday, May 28, at Rickshaw Stop.
Lineup: Aaron Hazen, drums, loops; Wendy Brents, vocals, synth bass; Andrew Gomez, vocals, guitar, keys; Bevin Fernandez, vocals, keys; Ryan McGee, guitar, keys; Clayton Vorheis, bass.
Was there a band you heard when you were young that inspired you to become a musician?
Andrew Gomez: I saw the “Smells Like Teen Spirit” video and thought, “I want to jump around and go berserk, too.” It was honest, raw and catchy, and it seemed so accessible. I liked other bands before Nirvana, but they were the first to make me feel like I could play music. I didn’t realize until later how much time, energy and sacrifice goes into writing music and starting a band, but by then I was already hooked.
How does living in the Bay Area affect your music?
AG: Growing up here, we’ve had access to so much music. All the best bands come through San Francisco, and we’ve always had an eclectic local scene. With so many venues to play, we had opportunities to experiment and fail in front of an audience, to watch other up-and-coming bands, and also to reinvent ourselves. Currently, there’s so much friction and change going on around us, that it’s hard not to be inspired by it, both positively and negatively.
Which of your lyrics best defines your band and why?
AG: Our song “2 Young 2 Know” comes to mind.
“Rushing to the back of a bar that has to close, where the kids all dance alone and think they won’t grow old. We’re too afraid to love, all wearing boxing gloves, watching the strangers go, too numb to know.”
It speaks to the coldness and selfishness inherent in our modern times and how superficial our interactions have begun to feel. It’s easy to have 5,000 “friends” on social media, but how many of them will be there for you when you’re stranded somewhere at 4 a.m.? - SF Chronicle
San Francicso newcomers NRVS LVRS have pulled the trigger on new single "City Lights", a rickety electro-indie sprawler with massive '80s-pop sparkles sprinkled over the top.
It's taken from The Golden West, the band's forthcoming debut record. They've already drawn comparisons to Broken Social Scene and Arcade Fire for their epic, prescient and intelligent rock tunes, all tinged with nuanced flavours of indie, pop, electronica and various other aural titbits.
The album tackles some hefty themes and discussions like the housing market, technology boom, the economy and the power of the corporations. It's galvanised by the tragedy that local citizens embedded in the city's culture, arts and music scenes are being priced out of their homes by faceless businesses, leaving a vapid, soul-extracted shell in the wake.
The band explain: ‘’What is happening in SF is happening in NYC, Detroit, and to my knowledge, just about every major city in the US & Europe, so the album's themes of dread, uncertainty, and displacement feel pretty timely, if not universal. We know we’re not the only ones experiencing an inordinate amount of disillusionment and disaffection... there is a dark side to SF's latest economic boom, and this is our snapshot of it.’”
Speaking specifically about the track "City Lights", the band's Andrew Gomez said: “I listened to the demo of this song while staring at the city from my apartment building's rooftop, and it's the perfect soundtrack for when you're pensively staring at the city lights and start feeling like an insignificant speck in the face of a tidal wave of change. It's my own projection, but it does a great job of articulating my own fears about losing my little niche in this town.”
NRVS LVRS are releasing their debut LP The Golden West 16 March on Hz Castle Records. - The Line Of Best Fit
NRVS LVRS (That’s Nervous Lovers for those of you into vowels) began making their composed indie rock as a musical experiment. The experiment worked. And so they became a band.
The alternative music scene is a better place for it.
Layering patient bass lines and lyrics (think The National) with epic, shimmering builds and lifts, the San Francisco band’s soundscapes are euphoric and introspective.
The video for “Golden West”, the title track from the band’s forthcoming debut album, is directed by renowned photographer Elizabeth Weinberg (her debut foray into directing music videos) and, like the track, seeks to highlight social injustice in the housing system both in the band’s native California and beyond.
With a realism that matches the band's lyrics and a little bit of magic that matches their production, without losing sight of its social message, Weinberg’s video perfectly meets the band’s sound. Two very exciting debuts indeed. - Hunger Magazine
So we pronounce it “nervous lovers” then, right?
This latest addition to search-optimized indie band names (right up there with CHVRCHES and Alvvays) San Francisco band NRVS LVRS provide an aptly contemporary twist on indie pop. At its root is the same new romantic-derived sounds Stars have been excelling at for the past 15 years, but with smart additions of chillwave, electropop, and dreampop. The tactic works especially well on their debut album, which can be streamed in its entirety below in advance of its 8 September release date.
“A while ago, I came across the Tom Waits quote, ‘I like beautiful melodies telling me terrible things’,” says band member Andrew Gomez, “and I’ve tried to use that as a roadmap for just about every song I write. Writing purely political screeds set to music is going to turn off most people, so the trick is making complicated issues personal in a tight pop format.
“This particular album reflects our experience of living in San Francisco, a city whose income inequality is the second worst in the United States, and there are a lot of terrible things happening here. Frankly, it has worn on us. And, really, what can we do? We thank our lucky stars for rent control, hope we don’t get evicted (as has already happened to two of us), and write pissed off pop songs about what we’re seeing. Surprisingly, it was a fun challenge to see how much anger and disgust we could squeeze into a pop song before it became heavy-handed.” - Pop Matters
Sometime over the past few years, the music video reached its artistic peak. Without the need for mass appeal, mainstream acceptance, or industry approval, the internet became a fertile ground for creative visions to accompany songs. In 2015, YouTube is doing as much for bands as MTV in its heyday, with a more level playing field: talent and creativity don’t have to pass go in some corporate boardroom; art is judged on its own values in a true meritocracy.
This new culture has allowed for some impressive displays, and in the case of NRVS LVRS‘ spectacular new video for “Cordoba Grey”, it’s a brilliant continuation of the music-video-as-movie-trailer theme. Directed by David Dutton with cinematography by Fernando Camarena, “Cordoba Grey” takes the San Francisco’s band sleek synth-pop and set it against a thrilling crime drama.
We caught up with Dutton, Camarenas, and NRVS LVRS’ Andrew Gomez and Bevin Fernandez for a chat about “Cordoba Grey,” he band’s latest single that’s out June 2 via Breakup Records.
With a video this intense, we figured it was best to let the creators do the talking. Watch “Cordoba Grey” down below, in between the two interviews, and catch NRVS LVRS at the Rickshaw Stop in San Francisco this Thursday, May 28.
Michael Marotta: This is a loaded question, but where did the inspiration and storyline for “Cordoba Grey” come from? The visuals, pace, and storytelling are incredible, as well as the editing.
David Dutton: Thank you for that great praise. I’ve always been a big fan of crime movies like Bonnie and Clyde, Natural Born Killers, True Romance, and dare I say, Leon (The Professional). When I first heard “Cordoba Grey,” I was instantly drawn to the first duet. After a solemn solo by each artist complimenting each other about something that sounds like murder and mayhem for sport, we get thrown into a powerful duet about their legacy on the front page of a newspaper. It only seemed right to show them dead together singing about their partnership in crime that ultimately took their lives. I had that image of them, back to back, dead in their motel room, the aftermath of their last shootout. From there I built the rest of the story.
After solidifying the theme, what were the next steps? Did you approach the band or was it a collaborative process?
David Dutton: Yes, I did. The band has a strong sense and theme behind their entire album. Originally I had the couple robbing a super market, or warehouse, but to keep in their Tech Takeover idea we moved it to a tech office. Which made it less cliche for me.
There was a lot to cover in this music video, but basically I drew a timeline of the song and all the different parts sectioned off, like verses, solos, instrumental parts, little reverbs or distortions… I took the main chunks and put in scenes for each, working my way back to the end of the video which would show an unknowing couple to the events ahead. It was planned from the start to flash in clips of the future or past.
Was there a deliberate effort to modernize the Bonnie & Clyde story?
David Dutton: It definitely inspired me, but I was thinking Natural Born Killers most the time. Maybe it was the line “So put your ear up to my lips/And hear me ask you for a clip/We’re going on a killing spree/Just my little girl and me.” Though we actually did shoot a few scenes with Andrew shooting some victims, we ultimately decided together to remove the shots because it drastically removed sympathy for their characters. I also thought of the ’90s Romeo and Juliet movie a lot. I think I inadvertently dressed Andrew in that turquoise Hawaiian shirt to mimic that look.
My girlfriend watched the video with me, and she lived in the Inner Sunset for a few years. She noted the robbing of a tech company. Is she reading into it, after experiencing first hand what’s going on in SF? We have a similar thing, though a few years behind, here in Boston.
David Dutton: Yes it was a deliberate choice, as I wrote above, but I think Andrew could divulge on that more.
Andrew Gomez: As David was drawing up his treatment, I was really impressed with his ideas and the level of detail in every scene. We started talking about the NRVS LVRS album and some of the themes from it: gentrification, displacement, loss, etc., and I explained that this song ends the album because it’s kind of a Bonnie & Clyde/Robin Hood revenge fantasy in that the narrators in the song are a bit unhinged, see the tech industry as the root of their suffering, and feel pushed to self-destructive violence. It’s pretty easy to feel frustrated and powerless here in SF when City Hall quite obviously represents the interests of the moneyed few over the rest of us. Once we started talking about that, David was inspired to incorporate it into the story to try to add a different angle to the classic outlaws-on-the-run type of narrative we’d already begun.
What was the most challenging scene to shoot? The most rewarding?
David Dutton: The most challenging was the tech company robbery. It was late at night and we needed to make it look full and alive. The band had some friends come in, and we just kept using the same guys in different spots. But the most challenging part was having Andrew be a convincing actor, and effectively walk-in and punch his friend to the ground. I think we did that shot 11 times. Andrew was surprisingly good at his role and may have scared the shit out of friends a few times.
The most rewarding was the first scene, the morgue. It took us the longest to find that location but we lucked out after learning that Kink, or The Armory Studios, had a medical set. Our makeup artist did a great job on the actors, and the band did an amazing job singing and looking truly dead. The most challenging part was to grab all the performance without any blinks in them. It was our first day of shooting and its success set the tone for the rest of our four-day shoot.
Fernando Camarenas: I can’t speak for everyone else, but for me the most physically challenging shot was the bathtub scene. The bathroom at the rundown hotel we rented was smaller than expected. The only way to get the overhead shot of Bevin soaking in the water was to hover over her with my feet wedged on opposite ends of the bathtub while handholding the camera. As I’m standing there in this odd sumo-wrestler squat I’m thinking, one wrong move and not only will I ruin $20,000 worth of film gear but I’ll also take out the lead actress in the process. I was praying that the thread on my old chucks would hang in there. Luckily we got it done in five takes.
When David and I take the footage back to the office and screen the dailies, I think everything we shoot is rewarding. We’re like little kids in a candy store, super excited. A lot of people don’t understand, in our race against the clock, we’re averaging about 60 to 80 setups a day, which is insane. After six years of working together I think we have this down to an exact science. And when you work with a band like NRVS LVRS, who is as excited as we are to make a video, it makes the whole experience that much more rewarding.
What did you think when David came to you with this vision? Or was this a joint process from the start?
Andrew Gomez: Well, to rewind it a little further, I was really excited to work with David just based off of his enthusiasm after I showed him the record, which he asked to hear after he had heard our first single “City Lights.” We already had a director for that and “Golden West,” so we enlisted him for “Cordoba Grey.” He was the first director to be, like, “I have to do a video for you guys.” We want to work with people with that intensity of purpose, so that’s why we’ve asked him to do another after this.
But, to get back to your question, honestly, Bevin and I felt a little apprehensive. We loved David’s vision, but it seemed like we were going to have to do a lot of acting, which I’d never done before. The risk of failure seemed incredibly high, but David was so passionate & insistent, we decided to take the plunge. We figured trying something new would be fun and putting ourselves in a bit of an uncomfortable situation could lead to something really cool. Trusting David was a smart decision, as his zeal shows through in so many ways. His cuts are very musical and move in lockstep with the snare fills at times. He also planned out a ridiculous amount of shots in a wide array of locations. It felt like we were making a short film.
As for the idea for the video, that was all David. He asked about the different themes contained in the album, but he’s the one who ran with it. From the overall concept to the bullet hole placement, this was his baby. The only thing Bevin and I did was pick out our clothes, choose the different masks we used, and follow David’s direction.
It’s cool that this video is for an electronic pop song. There are some lyrical themes that tie into the video storyline, but at some points there’s a cool juxtaposition between the action on the screen and the style of music. Is there something that’s sinisterly seductive about electronic music where it can soundtrack a violent theme like this video?
Andrew Gomez: Interesting question. I suspect you might be on to something. Personally, I’m really inspired by electronic music right now, because the sonic palettes seem so much larger than rock, which I’m more familiar with. You can really manufacture some hard edges on your sounds, and we were searching for tones that had an icy aloofness to them, which I think does pair well with violent imagery. Before we even knew there was going to be a video for this song, we were trying to achieve a sexy but frigid sound, like a vampire couple making out in a meat locker or something. So, yeah, I’d say electronic tones make it easier achieve a cinematic feel, but it takes guys like David and Fernando to actually do the heavy lifting of making the visuals and the music glue together.
What do you want people to take away from this video?
Bevin Fernandez: I don’t feel the need for people to take away some sort of “message” or anything like that. If they do, great. Mostly, I just hope they enjoy getting sucked into the narrative David created in this video. Andrew and I always say that this video made our song better. Now, when I hear or when we’re playing the song, I think of the imagery created in the video, and I love how the two have blended like that. Don’t get me wrong. I care about every video that we have done, but when it came time for us to have a video for “Cordoba,” I felt really protective of it. I always felt that the song had a very cinematic feel and really hoped the video would do that aspect of the song justice, but I couldn’t have anticipated what David was able to do not only with our budget, but with our limited acting experience and the limited amount of time to shoot.
What’s next for NRVS LVRS? Any plans to hit the east coast?
Andrew Gomez: We would love to go to the East Coast to tour, especially since our guitar player Ryan is from there. Currently, there’s nothing on the books, but we hope to get out there either the end of this year or early in 2016. - Vanyaland
Earlier this year, San Francisco’s NRVS LVRS released “City Lights”, their first single from their forthcoming album The Golden West. Today, we’re pleased to give you the first look at the video for “City Lights”. Directed by Michael D. Poore, the visuals are dominated by gorgeous nighttime shots of our favorite city superimposed on singer Wendy Brents’s face until she is ultimately joined by the rest of the band and a flurry of percussion at a house party. Find your dark, cozy place, and enjoy the video below:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YNzbkxmkSUo
The Golden West, which is set for a March 15 release on Hz Castle Records, was mostly recorded in a San Francisco apartment, with the rest laid down with Patrick Brown at Different Fur. NRVS LVRS’ next show will be the March installment of the free Wood Shoppe series, (which just turned 3!), at Brick and Mortar on March 3. - The Bay Bridged
It was about a year ago that the San Francisco based sextet NRVS LVRS began their musical journey, and it's a year later that the fruits of their labor are finally being seen. That comes in the form of their debut single 'City Lights', which glistens every bit as bright as the lights on their hometown's famed Golden Gate Bridge. It's a refreshing take on the synth-dripping, 80's reminiscent pop that seems to be all the rage, favoring Feist or Broken Social Scene instead of CHVRCHES or Passion Pit. The band's Andrew Gomez has shared his thoughts on the song in a press release:
“I listened to the demo of this song while staring at the city from my apartment building's rooftop, and it's the perfect soundtrack for when you're pensively staring at the city lights and start feeling like an insignificant speck in the face of a tidal wave of change. It's my own projection, but it does a great job of articulating my own fears about losing my little niche in this town.”
'City Lights' is pulled from their debut album Golden West, out later this spring on 16 March via Hz Castle Records. - The 405
Another year in the books. You ready to find out what 2015 holds for new music?
Let’s find out.
NRVS LVRS are a San Francisco 6-piece who began their journey at the beginning of 2014, when a collection of songs written initially for the purpose of musical experimentation, found themselves at the centre of a newly forming band. Led by Andrew Gomez and girlfriend Bevin Lee, The Golden West is the resulting work that has the band exploring the fading art of political music.
“Each song examines a different point of view on the latest tech disruption and its leaders” says Gomez. Exploring the many problems the current technology boom in their native San Francisco is causing, the band capture a city with a disappearing arts & culture scene, where work and free time have become indistinguishable, and locals are being priced out of their own homes. Musically, the group meld circuit bent bleeps, grimy drum loops, buzzy toys, humming synths, processed handclaps and failing 80’s keyboards, creatively edited together with the flesh and blood sounds of guitar, bass, & drums. - Indie Music Filter
According to their press release, NRVS LVRS spin a dreamscape of internal narratives that envelops exactly what it means to live in San Francisco. But their new video for "2 Young 2 Know," premiering below, also captures exactly what it means to be young and reckless universally. Following two women drinking in graveyards, flashing cars, and snogging, it's basically a compilation of all the best moments of your life in three minutes through a Harmony Korine lens.
Taken from their debut full-length The Golden West, released on Breakup Records, "2 Young 2 Know" is a snapshot of the emotional place between starry-eyed hope and late-night anxiety. Landing somewhere between Tears for Fears and My Bloody Valentine, NRVS LVRS have taken the particular days when your responsibility-free teenage years begin to creep into existential crisis and turned them into magic. - Noisey
Discography
The Golden West LP
Photos
Bio
The creation of NRVS LVRS - now a six-piece - was driven by the desire of partners Andrew Gomez and Bevin Lee to link their creative muses and express their thoughts and feelings on their rapidly-changing city.
Circuit-bent bleeps, grimy drum loops, buzzy toys, humming synths and failing 80's keyboards are all edited together with the flesh and blood sounds of guitar, bass, & drums in this album, presenting a band ready to explore the fading art of political music.
Their upcoming album The Golden West explores the many problems the current technology boom in their native San Francisco is causing. In a city with a disappearing arts & culture scene, where work and free time have become indistinguishable, and locals are being priced out of their own homes, NRVS LVRS find themselves at the forefront of the conversation.
The album will be released on Breakup Records this fall.
Band Members
Links