Sponsored link
Wednesday, May 8, 2024

Sponsored link

New Music: Stone Foxes polish their rock into 'Gold'

New Music: Stone Foxes polish their rock into ‘Gold’

Local indie band's new EP shows a leap in studio shine while keeping the charm intact.

Through numerous lineup changes over the years, San Francisco outfit The Stone Foxes—playing the Independent Sat/29, as part of Noise Pop 2020—formed in 2005 and have retained a sound that blends heroic, guitar-driven rock strains, with a modern blues twist. (Don’t confuse them with ’90s glam rock darlings Stone Fox, however.)

Refusing to be dissuaded from ripples in designer musical trends, this band sticks to what works for them. By doing so, theyÊ»ve racked up more than 30 million Spotify streams from over 218,000 monthly listeners. How is that? By generating an essence-in all their arrangements-that could flow effortlessly after the intro song to The SopranoÊ»s. Perfecting that retro-timeless rock angle. With Shannon Koehler at the helm of the track “I Want Gold,” from the soon to be released EP Gold—a new collection of heavy lifting rock paeans—it sets in motion, a piercing depiction of the times, broadcasting the world’s infatuation with greed, deception, and loss.

 

Enlisting composer Jon Shamieh, of Impossible Burger and The Walking Dead, for “I Want Gold” and lead single “The Death Of Me,” the rockers stay on familiar territory with high-flying amplified presentations The rest of the project features the talents of Oona Garthwaite, AhSa-Ti Nu Ford Tyehimba, and Kelly McFarling on the tracks “Can’t Go Back” and “Running Out Of Space,” all highly sought after female vocalists who punch-in here, just as hard as the dudes.

From their youthful days of quad-lead-singer-rock-n-roll to their indie-roots-rock-tour-mania all the way to their brief stint as a Swedish synth-pop collective, according to the bandʻs website, the Brothers Koehler, Shannon and Spence, have remained the creative anchors of Bay Area ensemble.

Now, with Spence pulling a full-on Brian Wilson, writing songs in his sand-filled Malibu beach mansion, Shannon has taken on the role of “full-time microphone boy,” leading the charge in the studio and on the road. In this new set-up, the dudes still pull from a hot pool of talented collaborators, both familiar and new. With Gold, the band states that it’s clear the hill-folk turned flat-landers have evolved their studio technique from “point the horn at the gutbucket” to a fuller and more sophisticated sound.

Gold will be released Fri/28. Stone Foxes perform Sat/29 at the Independent, SF. More info here. 

48 Hills welcomes comments in the form of letters to the editor, which you can submit here. We also invite you to join the conversation on our Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram. 

John-Paul Shiver
John-Paul Shiverhttps://www.clippings.me/channelsubtext
John-Paul Shiver has been contributing to 48 Hills since 2019. His work as an experienced music journalist and pop culture commentator has appeared in the Wire, Resident Advisor, SF Weekly, Bandcamp Daily, PulpLab, AFROPUNK, and Drowned In Sound.

Sponsored link

Featured

Pile it high at SF’s Mt. Rushmore of sandwich shops

Banh mis, Leroy Browns, Renzo Specials, tri-tip delights: Four peak spots for grabbing a hearty lunch on the go.

Uproarious camp-fest ‘Bitch Slap!’ is a surprisingly touching ode to SF

D'Arcy Drollingers tribute to over-the-top '80s soaps features the talents of folks who could only be found here.

Under the Stars: Sheila E., Snoop Dogg, The Streets prove some classics still shine

Plus: New sounds from Los Bitchos, Allysha Joy, Ian Carey & Wood Metal Plastic—and RIP Rev. Cecil Williams.

More by this author

Under the Stars: Bubbling up with foamboy, night-dubbing with Monty Luke…

BALTHVS rocks global vibes, Eris Drew runs the rave tape, Neutrals wish you were here, more music to support!

Music festival season kicks off—and keeps on kickin’

Turn up the sonic sunshine with Yerba Buena Gardens Fest, How Weird Street Faire, SFLive, Bhangra & Beats, more

1984—the year pop music shot to the stratosphere

As the 40th anniversary releases and tributes roll out, revisiting a year of barrier-busting giants.
Sponsored link

You might also likeRELATED