| The  members of Adelaide, Australia’s Atlas Genius do things a little  differently….They set about building a studio where they could write and record  music for their newly formed band three years before they even played their  first live show as Atlas Genius. “We really got down and dirty with dry walling  and literally laying the floorboards, and at the same time we were taking a  couple of days a week to focus on writing songs,” recalls Keith Jeffery, Atlas  Genius’s vocalist/guitarist. "We had a lot of song ideas and it was  important to us to have our own studio where we could experiment and hone in on  our sound," adds brother and drummer, Michael Jeffery. Their dream studio,  which took two years to build, was designed and outfitted by the brothers with  the help of their father (who comes from a music and engineering background).  Once the studio was complete, the first song that Atlas Genius finished was a  song called “Trojans,” which they wrote, recorded and produced in collaboration  with their friend, keyboardist Darren Sell. After many weeks tweaking the song,  Michael insisted that the song was ready to be heard outside of the studio  walls.  Within an hour, “Trojans” was on  the Triple J Unearthed Website, SoundCloud, and for sale via TuneCore on  iTunes, Amazon and Spotify worldwide.    “We  had begun to think that music was a pipedream and we had all gone back to  university to pursue more realistic careers,” says Keith. “We’d had such a long  slog of playing late nights and working all day, and it felt like we didn’t  really have anything to show for it.” But then, in the midst of cramming for  their Fall 2011 semester final exams, Neon Gold discovered “Trojans” on the  Triple J Unearthed Website and wrote a post praising “Trojans” as a song sure  to “invade your head, all dressed up in a clever disguise of earnest vocals  riding a hooky riff.” Checking the band’s email account for the first time in  over a month, the band found that dozens of record labels, publishers, lawyers,  booking agents and management companies from all over the world had contacted  them.    “We  were trying to focus on school, but it was just impossible,” recalls Keith. “So  we said, ‘There’s something going on here. Let’s get back to the music.’” The  band added manager, Jonny Kaps from +1, to their extended family to navigate  all of the interest as the band focused on writing and recording more  songs.     Quickly  named an iTunes Single of the Week in Australia and New Zealand, “Trojans”  reached #4 on Hype Machine by the end of May. In August, SiriusXM Satellite  Radio’s Alt-Nation discovered the song on a blog and decided to give it some  spins. There was an immediate reaction from listeners, and in September,  “Trojans” was placed into heavy rotation, where it maintained a top-five  position on the listener-generated Alt-18 countdown and peaked at number one  for 4 consecutive weeks in January 2012. “Trojans” began selling over a  thousand tracks per week on U.S. iTunes and soon climbed to 45,000 sales - all  with zero promotional efforts from the still-unsigned Atlas Genius.   “Knowing  we had this audience that was waiting on new songs, we had a much greater sense  of purpose than we had before,” says Keith. “It was really exciting to know  that there were people who wanted to hear more of our music.” Although labels  were clamoring for the band to come to the U.S. and play a series of showcase  gigs, Atlas Genius turned down those offers in favor of staying in Adelaide to  keep writing and recording new songs. In February 2012, after months of  communicating with numerous labels via Skype, the band chose to travel to the  US in order to make their label decision.    “We’d  never been to America before,” says Keith. “We flew in at night and saw this  sea of lights, and it really became apparent to us how massive the U.S. is. It  was pretty intimidating - like ‘How do we fit into all this?’” In April 2012,  the band returned to the states having made their decision to sign with Warner  Bros. Records. “We felt a connection with them,” notes Keith. “Everyone there  feels very creative and dedicated to the music.”   The  band’s first release from their new label home, the EP Through The Glass (produced, engineered and mixed by the band), came  out in June of 2012. With Through The Glass completed, Atlas Genius then holed up in its studio and worked on writing  and recording its first full-length album, while at the same time rehearsing  for their first ever tour. The tour started in August 2012 which led to three  more tours back to back in the US. Thus, their full-length debut was finished up  between tour dates and got completed just before Christmas 2012. When It Was Now was released in the U.S.  on February 19th, 2013, with its international release following  soon after.      The debut captures  Atlas Genius’s singular combination of sophisticated musicality and warm,  wistful spirit. Infused with a classic sensibility, each of the songs would fit  seamlessly if somehow slipped into a long-treasured mixtape. On the shimmering  “Symptoms,” for instance, taut keyboard riffs mesh with urgent acoustic  strumming before the band bursts into a gently frenetic, guitar-drenched  chorus. Meanwhile, “Back Seat” blends its pulsing bass throb with a sweetly  infectious beat and tender vocals that alternately soar and sigh. And on  “Trojans,” Atlas Genius begins with a restrained guitar melody and vocal (“Take  it off, take it in/Take off all the thoughts of what we’ve been”) before giving  way to the handclap-accented, harmony-soaked refrain and lush yet kinetic  bridge.   “It’s  still surreal,” says Keith of all that’s happened over the past 18 months. “I think when we were very young, we had hopes that  something like this might happen one day,” he continues. (Thanks largely to  encouragement from their Beatles fanatic parents, who encouraged the brothers  to begin playing music by age 14.) “But then you grow up a bit and it seems  less and less likely. So when we put ‘Trojans’ out, we figured it would be a  success if maybe a hundred people heard it. We don’t want to force our music  onto anyone. Our goal is to write songs that we love and we hope they connect  with other people too.”
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