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October Project

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In their brief, three-year career, October Project released two albums stuffed to the seams with soaring, sweeping, aching melodies. Their intense, plaintive pop songs are tinged with the influence of both the alternative pop and new age movements of the 1990s, but they seem to have more in common with Broadway musicals than with any other pop musicians (although the band has admitted a similarity to early Jefferson Airplane recordings). Both of the latter comparisons are in large measure due to the enormous sound of Mary Fahl's powerful lead vocals. At a time when most female pop singers affected some degree of waifishness, Fahl held nothing back. Her voice was the focal point of a sound dominated by vocal harmonies -- all four of the band's musicians sing at some point, and the soaring arrangements have provoked frequent comparisons to classical choral music. The melodies are written by Emil Adler, who plays piano, keyboards and harmonium. Marina Belica also plays keyboards, and sings duets with Fahl on almost every chorus. David Sabatino's rhythmic acoustic and electric guitars are the primary reason these string-dominated ballads remain in the realm of pop-rock music. The fifth band member is not a musician: Adler's wife, Julie Flanders, wrote most of the lyrics. Her words combine a subtle mysticism with an earthy sensuality, and her stories are well suited to the intense yearning of the music. One of her songs, "Take Me As I Am," is a dark love story inspired by Anne Rice's novel Interview With the Vampire. The band began its career playing in friends' living rooms, but they really constructed the specifics of their distinctive sound in the studio while in the process of recording their first (self-titled) album. Released in 1993, the record was produced by Peter...

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