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Portland Mercury Review by Ned Lannamann

MONARQUES “Order! Order! Let this meeting of the Leg-Crossin’ Club come to order!”
“I’VE WANTED to put out this record since I was a kid,” says Joshua Spacek. “So I’m putting it out. And then I’m gonna see where it takes me.”
He’s talking about Let’s Make Love Come True, the long, long (long) awaited album from Monarques that’s had Portland music insiders gushing since it was completed all the way back in April 2011. After many trials, tribulations, lineup changes, red tape, and plain old luck—of both the extremely good and absolutely horrible varieties—it’s finally seeing the light of day via a self-release from the band. Trimmed down from its nine original tracks to a brisk seven, Let’s Make Love Come True is a valentine to true love in the classic pop-song sense: shared milkshakes, letter jackets, those last slow dances of the night—and, of course, love’s subsequent nuclear fallout of heartache and betrayal.
“I was listening to a lot of really early R&B music,” Spacek says, who writes the band’s material and delivers it in a gymnastic, smooth, soul belt. “Songs about drinking too much whiskey and staying out all night long—a lot of Etta James songs that Berry Gordy wrote. He wrote most of her big songs and played piano at a lot of her sessions. And that spurred a fascination in Berry Gordy, which led to Motown and his factory approach of songwriting. I had a very prolific summer when I discovered all of that, and that’s when I wrote the majority of the stuff on this record. I felt like these were classic themes that everyone can identify with.”
With a sweet but never sugary rock ‘n’ roll thrust powering through the record’s lushly reverbed production, Monarques explores the twin, towering themes of redemptive love and the exquisite hurt that comes from things getting shitty. And, following some auspicious beginnings, things did get pretty shitty for Monarques, even as they initially seemed headed for unmistakable success.
Spacek formed the group after leaving Portland rock band Oh Captain, My Captain to write more upbeat, straight-ahead pop songs. Perhaps fittingly, Oh Captain’s Jesse Bettis and Joe Bowden—Spacek’s old friends—have recently become part of the Monarques lineup, joining Spacek, guitarist Michael Slavin, and bassist Richard Bennett, who was the first Monarque to join.
“I took out a Craigslist ad to start Monarques,” says Spacek. “That’s how I met Rich. Because of all of my influences and everything that I had written in the Craigslist ad—doo-wop bands, the Kinks, the Beach Boys—I got nothing but 50- to 60-year-old men sending their résumés. Stuff like, ‘I’ve been gigging for 25 years!’ But then Rich was like, ‘I just moved here from the East Coast a week and a half ago, and I’ve always wanted to be in the band that you want to start.’ He showed up at my rehearsal space, and two weeks later we were in the middle of getting ready to record an EP and play our first show.”
After accruing a local buzz around their joyous, good-time shows of maximum R&B, a New York label expressed interest in the band throughout Let’s Make Love Come True’s recording process, which was helmed by Beau Raymond and largely tracked live in a week, without using headphones or a click track. The New York label’s overtures resulted in the band turning down other potential offers, but after recording wrapped, and on the eve of a tour with new gear, the arrangement fell through. Some members had to quit the band for other obligations, the bills racked up, and the momentum was gone. Monarques’ last show, barring a Valentine’s Day cover set, was in January.
“It’s been difficult to progress because of a lot of things,” admits Spacek, who’s relieved and excited that the band’s purpose has been renewed with the record’s release. “Right now, we’re just focused on the summer and promoting the record and sticking with that for the time being. And then we’ll turn our attention to the next thing. It’s been a tough year. It’s been a hard year for me, just personally, and dealing with all of the band stuff, the ups and downs. It has not been easy to ride all the waves.”
But Spacek remains positive about everything he and the band have gone through. “We’ve been lucky with everything, really, when it comes down to it. Because people come to have fun at our shows, which is great. And we’ve always had fun. Monarques was designed to be fun and to have a good time—that’s the driving force.”
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Willamette Week Review by Jay Horton
Rave On
Portland’s Monarques (finally) spread their wings.
MONARQUES - IMAGE: Alicia J. Rose
Even for a town rife with butterfly collectors eager to net especially rarefied species,Monarques’ fitful approach toward maintaining band loyalty would ordinarily test the patience of even the fiercest advocates. The Portland pop troupe hasn’t played a proper show since last November’s opening slot for similarly time-swept critical darling Sharon Jones (should one disregard Monarques’ annual Valentine’s Day covers concert), and the whole of the group’s summer-fall tour schedule extends from Doug Fir Lounge to Rontoms to Bunk Bar. Traversing the mile that separates those Eastside Industrial nightspots takes about six minutes, or just over one-fourth the length of Monarques’ exceedingly long-in-gestation debut, Let’s Make Love Come True.In the two-plus years it took for songwriter-vocalist-monarch of Monarques Josh Spacek and his ever-changing corps of master musicians to appropriately set down these seven songs according to their composer’s unsparing standards, scores of local groups have sprung forth, released a few discs, ebbed momentum and faded from memory. Meanwhile, judging by the relatively extensive press coverage (this paper included) granted the prospect of fully formed recordings, Monarques needed only to sit out a few seasons for tastemaker attentions to be honed toward fever pitch, and the band still effortlessly surpassed all expectations.
“We’re following a path,” says Spacek, 29, of his band. “I don’t know where it’s going to head, but we’re not where we started doing Buddy Holly songs. There’s still an influence of early R&B and early rock ’n’ roll—there’s still the barroom piano—but it’s evolved into a totally different thing.”
Though primitive compared to the eventual levels of sophistication the members would attain, the five-song EP nevertheless propelled the band through a SXSW slot and, bizarrely, an April 2010 appearance on Prairie Home Companion’s “battle of the bands,” alongside four other acts chosen seemingly at random from across the country and musical spectrum by Garrison Keillor. Around this time, Monarques underwent a radical transformation, adding guitarist Michael Slavin and bassist Richard Bennett, followed shortly thereafter by drummer Scott Magee (Y La Bamba) and multi-instrumentalist Dave Depper (Fruit Bats, Loch Lomond). After a disastrous attempt at recording locally, the band traveled to the Family Farm studio of Beau Raymond—whose diverse credits include Xzibit, Joss Stone and Devendra Banhart—and began what turned out to be an even more arduous process.Since its inception as a raucous party band—then hosting seven or eight members, including a pair of female singers—Monarques has been prone to basement after-hours gigs and performances at clubs-of-the-moment. But Spacek’s group has always musically keyed in to decidedly older pop influences. Tiring of the fairly successful indie-folk group Oh Captain, My Captain that he co-founded with boyhood friend Jesse Bettis, Spacek accepted a challenge from Bladen County Records chief Matt Brown in 2009 to form a group from scratch in time for the label’s MusicfestNW showcase. Putting an ad on Craigslist for musicians to flesh out the early rock ’n’ soul-inspired sound he’d wanted to incorporate, the newly christened Monarques cut a rough demo to hand out as a festival favor before it had ever played a show. The band has been among the most talked-about in Portland ever since, despite its sporadic concert schedule.
“When we went into the studio and worked out what was underneath all of that, like the actual songs, that was a turning point,” Spacek says. “The original idea of Monarques was to be a fun party band, and that’s exactly what we were. Eight people getting drunk and playing rock and roll with the girls dancing around, us dudes doing our thing, and it was awesome. When Dave and Scott joined the band, we were able to experiment with the way that we played and develop into something more.”
At Family Farm, “we just put our amps in a circle and played the songs live,” Spacek says. “No click track, no headphones—nothing but feeling.”
Impeccably tailored in vintage tones but neither fashion forward nor backward leaning, the band draws heavily from a retro palette to create a sound uniquely its own. On the opening title track of Let’s Make Love Come True, just-so spurts of adenoidal energy chug upward through a daisy chain of hooks seamlessly interwoven. Spacek’s vocals limn the nervousness of adolescence, dawning recognition of their own powers and borne upon the sheer ebullience of unfiltered passions. Throughout, Slavin’s guitar darts and parries, eddying shimmering waves of finely tuned frustration or licking a tasteful tumescence against rhythms to make toes bleed from the tapping.
While so much of the music keyed to the touchstones of classicist pop either betrays an archival bloodlessness or exploits a thoroughly imagined virgin ur-teen cultural wilderness, Monarques are awash in swaggering restraint. This music is elegantly ecstatic, the aural equivalent of a Life magazine photo essay capturing Buddy Holly’s first threesome. “We’re not purists,” Spacek says. “We live now. There are elements of everything that’s happened in the last hundred years in the music.”
“I love honest music,” Slavin says. “There’s no laptop, there’s no synthesizers, just a group of guys playing music and singing harmonies. Recording the instrumental takes in a room as a band and not doing a million overdubs. You don’t see that a lot these days, and that’s pretty cool to me. There’s a nostalgia, there’s an emotion that comes from that, and you can hear it relayed in the music. Every Sunday, my mom cleaned the house and listened to the Beatles, and then she’d play Beatles songs on the piano. That’s something ingrained. Even though I kind of rebelled against that music as a youth, I later came to love it and think it was the best music in the world. I think it’s in my DNA.”
This is music utterly absent the faux naivete and orchestrated innocence of That Thing You Do!-styled post-nostalgic whitewashing of unremembered pasts. Even the band’s clearly dated aspects seem as respectful and casually worn as Spacek’s father’s ’50s watch (and, perhaps, haircut), niftily counterpointing thrift-store flannel and jeans. Some of that coolness came naturally, and some had to be learned through careful observation.
“When I first started writing these songs,” Spacek says, “I was listening to a lot of Etta James, a lot of Motown, and was really infatuated with the whole concept. The band playing behind her is a major part of what makes it so good. The jazz players have that subtlety, they know that they’re in the moment, they’re feeling every note, every bit of dynamic swell. That’s where the impact is, the emotion is—the swell of the band, the dying back down, pulling it back and pushing it forward. The give-and-take where they’re all fighting within the same space, that’s good music. What we’re making—without restraint, it’d be boring. Without pulling it almost down into nothing, that little tiny step isn’t so meaningful, and that’s something we had to discover along the way.”
SEE IT: Monarques play Doug Fir Lounge on Thursday, July 12, with Beisbol and Houndstooth. 9 pm. $8 advance, $10 day of show. 21+.
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Our first single! “I Won’t Cry”
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We’re putting out our record!! On July 10th “Let’s Make Love Come True” will be available via www.monarques.bandcamp.com
Cover photo by Jeffrey Dillon
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Jon at the Vegas Pool Party. Photo be Jeffrey Dillon.
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Somewhere in California. Photo by Jeffrey Dillon.
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Josh. Photo by Jeffrey Dillon.
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Hollywood. Photo by Jeffrey Dillon.





