Thee Oh Sees (a.k.a OCS, The Oh Sees, Oh Sees)
With a stage show that's best described as sweat-drenched, and a long list of albums sporting their trademark unhinged approach, Thee Oh Sees are one of the most invigorating garage punk bands of their era. Led by guitarist/vocalist John Dwyer, whose guitar sound and brutally powerful way of playing are instantly identifiable, the group went through a series of changes that led them from clanging lo-fi garage experimentalism on albums like their 2007 debut, Sucks Blood, to weirdo psych-pop on 2011's Castlemania and almost-slick garage punk on 2014's Drop. After that album, Dwyer expanded the band's sonic reach to include proto-metal, dark psych, and trippy prog. Released in 2015, Mutilator Defeated at Last bore the first fruits of this new sound, and over the next few years they embarked on a mad rush of creativity, resulting in a slew of mind-bending albums: 2016's A Weird Exits added some Motorik rhythms to the mix; long instrumental jams were featured on the same year's An Odd Entrances; boogie rock organs and mystical jazz-rock were featured on 2018's Smote Reverser; and 2019's Face Stabber offered up a blown-out fusion of all the things they had been doing over the past decade. After Rhode Island native Dwyer relocated to California in the late '90s, he became active on the San Francisco indie scene, playing with several bands including the Coachwhips, Pink & Brown, Yikes, Up Its Alive, and Swords & Sandals. Dwyer formed OCS (which is an acronym for Orinoka Crash Suite, Orange County Sound, or whatever Dwyer decided it was on any given day) as a vehicle for the experimental instrumentals he was producing in his home studio. In time, OCS morphed into an actual band, and worked under the usual flurry of names, most notably as the Oh Sees or the Ohsees, and eventually as Thee Oh Sees. The group featured Dwyer on guitar and vocals, Brigid Dawson on vocals and tambourine, Petey Dammit on bass, and Mike Shoun on drums. Sounding a bit like the Mamas & the Papas and Love run through a blender with bent and rusty blades, the band signed with the German Tomlab label and released Sucks Blood in 2007, and The Master's Bedroom Is Worth Spending a Night In in 2008. Thee Oh Sees' moved over to In the Red for their third album, 2009's Help, which featured a splash of a garage rock power mixed with the band's psych-pop sound. Warm Slime followed in 2010. Thee Oh Sees pulled double duty the following year, offering the pop-leaning Castlemania in June, followed in November by the heavier, wilder Carrion Crawler/The Dream, which was also the band's first recording with second drummer Lars Finberg of the like-minded group the Intelligence. Never a band to rest when they could be making noise, Thee Oh Sees returned in September 2012 with Putrifiers II, an album combining Castlemania's fractured pop sensibilities and Carrion Crawler/the Dream's ferocious rock experimentation. Their next foray, 2013's Floating Coffin, saw the group stripping away all the weirdness and hitting hard with a heavy set of straight-ahead garage/punk rock tunes. With Dawson moving to Santa Cruz and Dwyer decamping to L.A. later that year, it looked like the band would soon split, especially after Dwyer told the crowd at a show in December 2013, "This will be the last Oh Sees show for a long while, so dig in." The hiatus was temporary, though, and there was a new album, Drop, released in early 2014. It was made solely by Dwyer and longtime producer Chris Woodhouse in an old banana-ripening warehouse and featured a more arranged, strangely poppy sound. With a new lineup that featured drummer Nick Murray and bassist Timothy Hellman, Thee Oh Sees returned to the stage for a series of shows and recorded their 14th album, Mutilator Defeated at Last. It came out in May 2015 and featured former member Dawson on backing vocals. Soon after the album's release, Murray left the band and was replaced by two drummers, Ryan Moutinho and Dan Rincon, for a subsequent tour. A live album was recorded during a stop in San Francisco and issued in June 2016 as part of Castle Face's Live in San Francisco series. Following hot on the live album's heels was the group's 15th album, A Weird Exits, which arrived in August. It featured contributions from the live band and a cover by Hair Police's Robert Beatty, who is known for his hallucinatory, airbrushed artwork. Before the year was out, the band released another single, "Fortress," and An Odd Entrances, an album made up of songs recorded at the same sessions as A Weird Exits. The group were oddly silent for the first half of 2017; when they returned it was with an abbreviated name (Oh Sees) and a new drummer, Paul Quattrone, to replace the departed Moutinho. The first recorded output by the new lineup was Orc, which was released in August and featured contributions from Brigid Dawson. A couple months later, Dwyer and Dawson revived the OCS name for Memory of a Cut Off Head, an album of quietly hazy acid folk songs. The band took another long break (for them) from releasing albums, but when they did come back it was with the expansive, prog- and metal-influenced Smote Reverser. It was released by Castle Face in August 2018 and featured the same basic lineup as Orc, with the addition of keyboardist Tomas Dolas from Mr. Elevator and the Brain Hotel. The band kept up a steady rate of live shows throughout the next year, and Castle Face reissued two of the group's early lo-fi releases (The Cool Death of the Island Raiders and Graveblockers). They also found time to record Face Stabber, an expansively trippy album that added more electronic and free jazz elements to their already full sound that was issued in August 2019. After releases by Dwyer's Damaged Bug project and free jazz band Bent Arcana -- both of which featured appearances by Oh Sees bandmates -- Osees (note the slight alteration of the name) returned in late 2020 with Protean Threat, a more aggressive, punk-influenced album that boiled their prog and jazz leanings into smaller portions. Just in case anyone accused Dwyer of slacking, he rounded out the year by releasing Panther Rotate, an album made from drastic remixes of songs from Protean Threat, electronic excursions, field recordings, and a sideways cover of a song by Alice Cooper's early garage band the Spiders.© Steve Leggett & Tim Sendra /TiVo Read more
With a stage show that's best described as sweat-drenched, and a long list of albums sporting their trademark unhinged approach, Thee Oh Sees are one of the most invigorating garage punk bands of their era. Led by guitarist/vocalist John Dwyer, whose guitar sound and brutally powerful way of playing are instantly identifiable, the group went through a series of changes that led them from clanging lo-fi garage experimentalism on albums like their 2007 debut, Sucks Blood, to weirdo psych-pop on 2011's Castlemania and almost-slick garage punk on 2014's Drop. After that album, Dwyer expanded the band's sonic reach to include proto-metal, dark psych, and trippy prog. Released in 2015, Mutilator Defeated at Last bore the first fruits of this new sound, and over the next few years they embarked on a mad rush of creativity, resulting in a slew of mind-bending albums: 2016's A Weird Exits added some Motorik rhythms to the mix; long instrumental jams were featured on the same year's An Odd Entrances; boogie rock organs and mystical jazz-rock were featured on 2018's Smote Reverser; and 2019's Face Stabber offered up a blown-out fusion of all the things they had been doing over the past decade.
After Rhode Island native Dwyer relocated to California in the late '90s, he became active on the San Francisco indie scene, playing with several bands including the Coachwhips, Pink & Brown, Yikes, Up Its Alive, and Swords & Sandals. Dwyer formed OCS (which is an acronym for Orinoka Crash Suite, Orange County Sound, or whatever Dwyer decided it was on any given day) as a vehicle for the experimental instrumentals he was producing in his home studio. In time, OCS morphed into an actual band, and worked under the usual flurry of names, most notably as the Oh Sees or the Ohsees, and eventually as Thee Oh Sees. The group featured Dwyer on guitar and vocals, Brigid Dawson on vocals and tambourine, Petey Dammit on bass, and Mike Shoun on drums.
Sounding a bit like the Mamas & the Papas and Love run through a blender with bent and rusty blades, the band signed with the German Tomlab label and released Sucks Blood in 2007, and The Master's Bedroom Is Worth Spending a Night In in 2008. Thee Oh Sees' moved over to In the Red for their third album, 2009's Help, which featured a splash of a garage rock power mixed with the band's psych-pop sound. Warm Slime followed in 2010. Thee Oh Sees pulled double duty the following year, offering the pop-leaning Castlemania in June, followed in November by the heavier, wilder Carrion Crawler/The Dream, which was also the band's first recording with second drummer Lars Finberg of the like-minded group the Intelligence. Never a band to rest when they could be making noise, Thee Oh Sees returned in September 2012 with Putrifiers II, an album combining Castlemania's fractured pop sensibilities and Carrion Crawler/the Dream's ferocious rock experimentation. Their next foray, 2013's Floating Coffin, saw the group stripping away all the weirdness and hitting hard with a heavy set of straight-ahead garage/punk rock tunes.
With Dawson moving to Santa Cruz and Dwyer decamping to L.A. later that year, it looked like the band would soon split, especially after Dwyer told the crowd at a show in December 2013, "This will be the last Oh Sees show for a long while, so dig in." The hiatus was temporary, though, and there was a new album, Drop, released in early 2014. It was made solely by Dwyer and longtime producer Chris Woodhouse in an old banana-ripening warehouse and featured a more arranged, strangely poppy sound. With a new lineup that featured drummer Nick Murray and bassist Timothy Hellman, Thee Oh Sees returned to the stage for a series of shows and recorded their 14th album, Mutilator Defeated at Last. It came out in May 2015 and featured former member Dawson on backing vocals.
Soon after the album's release, Murray left the band and was replaced by two drummers, Ryan Moutinho and Dan Rincon, for a subsequent tour. A live album was recorded during a stop in San Francisco and issued in June 2016 as part of Castle Face's Live in San Francisco series. Following hot on the live album's heels was the group's 15th album, A Weird Exits, which arrived in August. It featured contributions from the live band and a cover by Hair Police's Robert Beatty, who is known for his hallucinatory, airbrushed artwork. Before the year was out, the band released another single, "Fortress," and An Odd Entrances, an album made up of songs recorded at the same sessions as A Weird Exits.
The group were oddly silent for the first half of 2017; when they returned it was with an abbreviated name (Oh Sees) and a new drummer, Paul Quattrone, to replace the departed Moutinho. The first recorded output by the new lineup was Orc, which was released in August and featured contributions from Brigid Dawson. A couple months later, Dwyer and Dawson revived the OCS name for Memory of a Cut Off Head, an album of quietly hazy acid folk songs. The band took another long break (for them) from releasing albums, but when they did come back it was with the expansive, prog- and metal-influenced Smote Reverser. It was released by Castle Face in August 2018 and featured the same basic lineup as Orc, with the addition of keyboardist Tomas Dolas from Mr. Elevator and the Brain Hotel.
The band kept up a steady rate of live shows throughout the next year, and Castle Face reissued two of the group's early lo-fi releases (The Cool Death of the Island Raiders and Graveblockers). They also found time to record Face Stabber, an expansively trippy album that added more electronic and free jazz elements to their already full sound that was issued in August 2019. After releases by Dwyer's Damaged Bug project and free jazz band Bent Arcana -- both of which featured appearances by Oh Sees bandmates -- Osees (note the slight alteration of the name) returned in late 2020 with Protean Threat, a more aggressive, punk-influenced album that boiled their prog and jazz leanings into smaller portions. Just in case anyone accused Dwyer of slacking, he rounded out the year by releasing Panther Rotate, an album made from drastic remixes of songs from Protean Threat, electronic excursions, field recordings, and a sideways cover of a song by Alice Cooper's early garage band the Spiders.
© Steve Leggett & Tim Sendra /TiVo
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Protean Threat
Thee Oh Sees (a.k.a OCS, The Oh Sees, Oh Sees)
Alternative & Indie - Released by Castle Face on 18 Sep 2020
4F de TéléramaWhen a band have released as many albums as Thee Oh Sees, or as they are known now Osees, it would make sense that occasionally they would put out a d ...
24-Bit 96.0 kHz - Stereo -
Levitation Sessions Vol. II (Live)
Thee Oh Sees (a.k.a OCS, The Oh Sees, Oh Sees)
Rock - Released by The Reverberation Appreciation Society on 23 Apr 2021
24-Bit 48.0 kHz - Stereo -
Face Stabber
Thee Oh Sees (a.k.a OCS, The Oh Sees, Oh Sees)
Alternative & Indie - Released by Castle Face on 16 Aug 2019
4F de TéléramaOCS, The Oh Sees, Thee Oh Sees, Oh Sees … Under many names, for the past 20 years, the Rhode Island oddity has practiced blending music with the bizar ...
24-Bit 96.0 kHz - Stereo -
Orc
Thee Oh Sees (a.k.a OCS, The Oh Sees, Oh Sees)
Alternative & Indie - Released by Castle Face on 25 Aug 2017
The Bay Area has always been something of a hotspot for musical counter-culture - the local scene in the late Sixties took in the Grateful Dead, Jeffe ...
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
Floating Coffin
Thee Oh Sees (a.k.a OCS, The Oh Sees, Oh Sees)
Alternative & Indie - Released by Castle Face on 16 Apr 2013
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
Smote Reverser
Thee Oh Sees (a.k.a OCS, The Oh Sees, Oh Sees)
Alternative & Indie - Released by Castle Face on 17 Aug 2018
Thank you, John Dwyer. Whether it's Thee Oh Sees, OCS or Oh Sees, it doesn't matter. Now he silver-tongued Californian's prodigious genius has thrown ...
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
A Weird Exits
Thee Oh Sees (a.k.a OCS, The Oh Sees, Oh Sees)
Alternative & Indie - Released by Castle Face on 12 Aug 2016
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
Carrion Crawler / The Dream
Thee Oh Sees (a.k.a OCS, The Oh Sees, Oh Sees)
Alternative & Indie - Released by In The Red on 8 Nov 2011
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
Mutilator Defeated at Last
Thee Oh Sees (a.k.a OCS, The Oh Sees, Oh Sees)
Alternative & Indie - Released by Castle Face on 26 May 2015
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
Levitation Sessions (Live)
Thee Oh Sees (a.k.a OCS, The Oh Sees, Oh Sees)
Rock - Released by The Reverberation Appreciation Society on 9 Oct 2020
24-Bit 48.0 kHz - Stereo -
Live at Big Sur
Thee Oh Sees (a.k.a OCS, The Oh Sees, Oh Sees)
Alternative & Indie - Released by Castle Face on 19 Feb 2021
24-Bit 88.2 kHz - Stereo -
Memory of a Cut off Head
Thee Oh Sees (a.k.a OCS, The Oh Sees, Oh Sees)
Alternative & Indie - Released by Castle Face on 17 Nov 2017
As if he weren't busy enough cranking out records with the Oh Sees, making weird electronic albums as Damaged Bug, and co-running the prolific Castle ...
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
Drop
Thee Oh Sees (a.k.a OCS, The Oh Sees, Oh Sees)
Alternative & Indie - Released by Castle Face on 15 Apr 2014
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
Weirdo Hairdo
Thee Oh Sees (a.k.a OCS, The Oh Sees, Oh Sees)
Alternative & Indie - Released by Castle Face on 8 Jan 2021
24-Bit 96.0 kHz - Stereo -
The 12" Synth
Thee Oh Sees (a.k.a OCS, The Oh Sees, Oh Sees)
Experimental - Released by Castle Face on 10 Dec 2019
24-Bit 48.0 kHz - Stereo -
Panther Rotate
Thee Oh Sees (a.k.a OCS, The Oh Sees, Oh Sees)
Alternative & Indie - Released by Castle Face on 11 Dec 2020
Hot on the heels of their late-2020 album Protean Threat, the ever-prolific Osees released a companion album of sorts made up of drastically remixed t ...
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
Singles Collection, Vol. 1 & 2
Thee Oh Sees (a.k.a OCS, The Oh Sees, Oh Sees)
Alternative & Indie - Released by Castle Face on 8 Mar 2011
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
Warm Slime
Thee Oh Sees (a.k.a OCS, The Oh Sees, Oh Sees)
Alternative & Indie - Released by In The Red on 10 May 2010
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
Funeral Solution
Thee Oh Sees (a.k.a OCS, The Oh Sees, Oh Sees)
Alternative & Indie - Released by Castle Face on 16 May 2022
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
Help
Thee Oh Sees (a.k.a OCS, The Oh Sees, Oh Sees)
Alternative & Indie - Released by In The Red on 28 Apr 2009
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo -
The Master's Bedroom is Worth Spending a Night In
Thee Oh Sees (a.k.a OCS, The Oh Sees, Oh Sees)
Alternative & Indie - Released by Castle Face on 4 Aug 2008
16-Bit CD Quality 44.1 kHz - Stereo