photo by Ingrid Renan
When my wife and I traveled 2,216 miles from Flowery Branch, Georgia to L.A we found ourselves in a sketchy motel in New Mexico that we had stopped at late at night after my eyelids became dangerously heavy. We traveled with our Pitador and our cat who had decided that night to climb up into the interior of the box spring that we found out had an inviting hole underneath. We didn't know this until the next morning when Bubby was no where to be found. While having to remove the mattress and lift the box spring way up high to extricate our pain in the ass cat, a thickly stuffed wallet fell to the floor. It was black with a metal western silver and turquoise adornment on it. It was full of credit cards and a license with the face and name of a ****** Ram**ez on it. We started telling each other fanciful tales about the wallet's owner how he was dead and involved with a drug cartel. We watch too much Ozark.
I thought of this when I pushed play on MAITA's track Someone Lost Their Goddamn Wallet from the Portland, Oregon quartet's debut album "Best Wishes" via the indie label Kill Rock Stars (Elliott Smith, Sleater-Kinney, the Decemberists). The band centers around front person Maria Maita-Keppeler who stokes and writes the bulk of the material. Keppeler's divergent songwriting contains interesting narratives and even more interesting melodies that cantilever out further than most in places, that decide to rush forward quickly, that step back, twist and turn in interesting ways and that can feel haphazardly precise.
Keppeler's interestingly wrought compositions need imaginative support and she gets it in spades from MAITA who is Maria Maita-Keppeler (lead vocals, harmonies, acoustic guitar, electric guitar), Matthew Zeltzer (electric guitar, harmony vocals), Nevada Sowle (bass) and Cooper Trail (piano, keyboards, drums, percussion, harmonies). I absolutely adore the musical / artistic choices on Someone Lost Their Goddamn Wallet. Keppeler's fluid poetry is always dazzling but the musical breaks here hold sway in a big way too. Great track.
-Robb Donker Curtius
THE FACTS AS WE KNOW THEM - PRESS NOTES:
“For me, songwriting comes from a place of wanting to find the truth in life. Sometimes that truth is so complex and nuanced that it requires a whole song to explain,” shares Maria Maita-Keppeler, the principal songwriter and front person for the Portland, Oregon-based indie rock band MAITA.
Maita-Keppeler’s bold vulnerability and literate flair is on full display on the quartet’s debut album, Best Wishes. The album will be out on venerated indie imprint Kill Rock Stars (Elliott Smith, Sleater-Kinney, the Decemberists) which is a story in itself. Until recently, KRS was headed up by Portia Sabin, whose husband Slim Moon founded the label. When Portia played MAITA’s record for Slim, who retired from the label 12 years ago, he experienced something of an epiphanic moment. “My love of MAITA, and my belief in Maria's songwriting, pulled me back into the record business,” Slim affirms. He has since returned to his original role as president of Kill Rock Stars.
Maita-Keppeler began experimenting with songwriting while soaking in the indie artists of the 2000’s such as Bright Eyes and Feist. She related to how these writers interweave reality and poetry, and resonated with their emotional candor, particularly in light of her tendencies toward emotional restraint while growing up.
“I have always had this desire to make sure everyone is happy and no one is dissatisfied or hurt,” Maita-Keppeler explains. “Music has been a place for me to demand the free space to say what I want to say.”
Best Wishes balances ethereal musicality with visceral expressiveness. This juxtaposition is mirrored in the arrangements through potent use of loud and soft dynamics and in Maita-Keppeler’s lyrics, which manage to be layered, literate, but also impactfully concise. Select album standouts include “Broken Down Boys,” “Japanese Waitress,” and “Perfect Heart.”
On the stately “Broken Down Boys” Maria unpacks how we often romanticize tragedy when are young, fetishizing it, seduced by it, without acknowledging the real people who bear its burden. A powerful point in the song’s narrative arc is when the protagonist searches online for the battered souls she cared for as a kid. Here, she details their struggles and fate, concluding with the biting lines: And I was another hungry girl / I said can I take a picture of you / Print it out and frame it in blue / Hang it on the wall of my room / Keep it close to make myself feel better / Keep it close to make myself feel older.
The haunting “Japanese Waitress” features a stirring patchwork of a-day-in-the-life vignettes. Together, these form a tapestry that illustrates what it can mean to be an artist with a wearisome day job.
“Perfect Heart” showcases the band’s dynamic surf-rock musicianship as fiery vessel for Maita-Keppeler’s pointed lyricism. The song’s raucous nature befits its playfully headstrong message. “It’s very tongue in cheek,” Maita-Keppeler acknowledges. “My heart is anything but perfect, but that song’s narrative is what I might repeat to protect myself when I feel too sensitive.”
MAITA is Maria Maita-Keppeler, lead vocals, harmonies, and acoustic guitar, and electric guitar; Matthew Zeltzer, electric guitar and harmony vocals; Nevada Sowle, bass; and Cooper Trail, piano, keyboards, drums, percussion, and harmonies. Best Wishes was produced by Maita-Keppeler and Zeltzer and tracked at the 100-year-old Ok Theatre in Enterprise, Oregon, and at Room 13 in Portland, Oregon. Previously, MAITA issued the 2017 EP Waterbearer and a clutch of singles.
Best Wishes balances ethereal musicality with visceral expressiveness. This juxtaposition is mirrored in the arrangements through potent use of loud and soft dynamics and in Maita-Keppeler’s lyrics, which manage to be layered, literate, but also impactfully concise. Select album standouts include “Broken Down Boys,” “Japanese Waitress,” and “Perfect Heart.”
On the stately “Broken Down Boys” Maria unpacks how we often romanticize tragedy when are young, fetishizing it, seduced by it, without acknowledging the real people who bear its burden. A powerful point in the song’s narrative arc is when the protagonist searches online for the battered souls she cared for as a kid. Here, she details their struggles and fate, concluding with the biting lines: And I was another hungry girl / I said can I take a picture of you / Print it out and frame it in blue / Hang it on the wall of my room / Keep it close to make myself feel better / Keep it close to make myself feel older.
The haunting “Japanese Waitress” features a stirring patchwork of a-day-in-the-life vignettes. Together, these form a tapestry that illustrates what it can mean to be an artist with a wearisome day job.
“Perfect Heart” showcases the band’s dynamic surf-rock musicianship as fiery vessel for Maita-Keppeler’s pointed lyricism. The song’s raucous nature befits its playfully headstrong message. “It’s very tongue in cheek,” Maita-Keppeler acknowledges. “My heart is anything but perfect, but that song’s narrative is what I might repeat to protect myself when I feel too sensitive.”
MAITA is Maria Maita-Keppeler, lead vocals, harmonies, and acoustic guitar, and electric guitar; Matthew Zeltzer, electric guitar and harmony vocals; Nevada Sowle, bass; and Cooper Trail, piano, keyboards, drums, percussion, and harmonies. Best Wishes was produced by Maita-Keppeler and Zeltzer and tracked at the 100-year-old Ok Theatre in Enterprise, Oregon, and at Room 13 in Portland, Oregon. Previously, MAITA issued the 2017 EP Waterbearer and a clutch of singles.
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