Most Popular

  • DISD In the Hole
    Teachers get axed and parents fret as Dallas' school leaders scramble to cover a budget hole
  • Polygamy and Me
    Seven months have passed since the polygamist raid in Eldorado, but for one mainstream Mormon, the effects linger
  • Beer Is Good
    Texas law stifles state's craft brewers
  • How To Piss Off A Member Of Weezer
    Brian Bell isn't so hot on comparisons between past Weezer records and the latest
  • DISD's Confederacy of Jerks
    Extremely pushy parents—Latino, black and Anglo—must rise up to save DISD from itself

Recent Articles

Recent Articles by Michael Gallucci

National Features >

  • SF Weekly

    Pinot Bizarre

    You won't believe the California wine industry's latest new-age craze.

    By Joe Eskenazi

  • Westword

    The Snowboard Bandits

    They lived for excitement, but the FBI got the final thrill.

    By Joel Warner

  • Seattle Weekly

    "Trash Fish"

    Chuck Bundrant built an unlikely seafood empire--with a little help from Alaska Senator Ted Stevens.

    By Laura Onstot

  • Village Voice

    The Transformation of Mike Bloomberg

    How a benevolent billionaire mayor ended up owning us all.

    By Wayne Barrett

The Hush Sound, The Cab

Monday, August 11, at The Door

By Michael Gallucci

Published on August 06, 2008 at 11:52am

A couple of years ago, The Hush Sound was just another boy-girl emo band from Chicago. The four kids, all barely out of their teens, did the usual bump-and-grind with the industry: They released a couple of albums, they made videos, they toured, they almost broke up.

All of this came down after 2006's Like Vines, which—like the previous year's debut, So Sudden—balanced singer/pianist Greta Salpeter's written and sung songs with those written and sung by her guitar-playing band mate Bob Morris. But somewhere between Like Vines, the break-up talk and recording the new Goodbye Blues, everything flipped around. Goodbye Blues is decidedly Salpeter's album. And The Hush Sound, whether she wants to admit it or not, has become Salpeter's band. On Goodbye Blues, Salpeter, coming off like Fiona Apple's go-getting understudy, lifts her voice to operatic heights, and her piano fills every empty space.

Still, Salpeter insists that The Hush Sound remains very much a group band. But it's hard not to read something else into this role reversal. Especially when Salpeter admits, as she has in recent interviews, that most of the songs on the record were written for her solo project.



Dallas Observer Insiders

  • Local food, music and news blasts
  • Free Stuff
Backpage.com