Snõõper Snõõper (the Project) began as a collaboration between
local Nashville punk mainstay Connor Cummins and Blair Tramel, an
early education teacher with a sideline in wickedly funny animation
and art. As their cassette tapes and homemade videos began to find
scattered fans around the world, the duo brought the Project to the
live stage in late 2021 and Snõõper (the Band) was born. Featuring
one of the wildest live shows out there, as well a maelstrom of
puppets, 8 bit animation, papier-mâché, whistles, flashing lights
and a whirling dervish of bodies, Snõõper commits the live act to a
studio setting and sets the stage for one of the most promising punk
debut albums in decades. But don’t take our word for it; here’s
Henry Rollins, at-length on the magic of Snõõper: In the briefest of
descriptions, Snõõper is a band who, in a 33 1/3 rpm world, make 45
rpm music they play at 78 and it completely works. Even at this
incredible speed, Snõõper (the kinetic duo of musician Connor
Cummins and visual/video artist, Blair Tramel) is super precise
instrumentally and skillfully melodic vocally, even though, again,
they’re flooring it almost the entire time. The overall effect is a
megadose of extremely cool and unique songs that while at the speed of
tomorrow, would lose their overwhelming fun factor if played any
differently. As far as Snõõper vinyl, there’s been three 7”
records: 2020’s Music For Spies, the Snõõper EP released in 2021
and last year’s Town Topic EP. All of them are great but you’d be
well advised not to sit down once you’ve put a side on, as you’ll
be getting up to flip the record over all too soon. Snõõper’s
music isn’t for sitting around to anyway. Diverging from their
regular two person line-up, for Super Snooper, Connor and Blair
brought on drummer Cam Sarrett, bassist Happy Haugen and Ian Teeple on
second guitar. The results do justice to the music and has evolved
Snõõper’s sound exponentially. On the fourth listen to Super
Snooper now and a new evaluation springs forth: Snõõper don’t play
fast. They play at the speed of Snõõper. The band is so tight, the
songs so ready for the Bonneville Salt Lake Flats testing site, one
might conclude Snõõper’s just leapin’ and lopin’, to borrow
the title of Sonny Clark’s excellent 1962 Blue Note LP.
Snõõper’s completely happening 11-23-22 thirty-four song 27:22 set
at Nashville’s Exit/In, mercifully recorded and released so you can
back up your witness testimony as to how smokin’ the show was with
actual audio verification is further proof of how totally ripping this
band is and brings to mind a topic insinuated by the live recording
but proven true by Super Snooper. Given the brief but awesome glimpses
into Snõõper’s music afforded by the aforementioned 7”s, one
might wonder if the group could hold the line for a full album. The
answer is an enthusiastic yes. Super Snooper is great great great and
you might find yourself playing it over and over as it gets better and
better the more you do. Speaking selfishly, I want Snõõper to hurry
up and make another album. This is a really cool record. - Henry
Rollins Snõõper’s debut studio album “Super Snõõper” will be
released globally on Third Man Records on July 14, 2023
music
155
Views
02/03/2025 Last update