Free Electric State releases Caress at The Pinhook Friday, April 16, at 10 p.m. Tickets are $5. A Rooster for the Masses and Beloved Binge open.

The way Free Electric State bends their guitar strings might bring to mind all sorts of beloved shoegaze bands from the heyday of Creation Records, but the one name that seems most appropriate to check here is Swervedriver. Free Electric State doesnโ€™t share that groupโ€™s penchant for hard-boiled, noir-flavored narratives, but theyโ€™re of a like mind when it comes to employing their pedals with an intent to rock out, not bliss out. Indeed, if someone uses the term โ€œshoe-grungeโ€ to describe this groupโ€™s charms, I hope they do so with the best of intentions.

Caress, the groupโ€™s full-length debut, begins with a bit of deception as guitarist David Koslowski takes a turn at the microphone for โ€œMatching Scars.โ€ Heโ€™s not bad by any means, and it would take a lot worse to make this tuneโ€™s pummeling onslaught and guitar heroics hard to enjoy. However, itโ€™s when bassist Shirlรฉ Hale takes over on lead vocals for the next track (and the majority of the album) that Caress truly works. The melodic sweetness inherent in Haleโ€™s voice disguises a sultry sneer that gives the albumโ€™s tunes a more distinctive personality. She lends the state-of-the-โ€™90s alt-rock balladry of โ€œDarkest Hourโ€ a little needed edge, gives an anthemic grandeur to the Pixies-like swagger of โ€œThe Black Seaโ€ and infuses โ€œSix Is Oneโ€ with an infectious nerve.

As you might gather from the references here, Free Electric State offers kicks that are laced with a bit of nostalgia, but that doesnโ€™t mean they sound long in the tooth. If anything, Caress sounds like the work of a group thatโ€™s looking backward to move forward.

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