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People who've never been there might hear "Kansas City" and think Dorothy and Toto or,
if somewhat more enlightened, jazz and barbecue. But there are more progressive things
going on there than you might expect. In their own humble and low-key way, the Kansas City,
Missouri-based trio Namelessnumberheadman have been blazing a trail that solidifies the
invisible bridge between far-off galaxies and rural landscapes. They take heartfelt,
melodic pop songs with a folk-ish acoustic tinge and swirl them into futuristic,
electronic soundscapes. Their songs are both ear-pleasing and exploratory;
you can hum along and feel like you've been transported somewhere new.
As critic Scott Wilson aptly put it in a recent Magnet review, "if the group called Iceland
home, it would end up on the cover of The Wire."
Named after a character in Steven Soderbergh's film Schizopolis, the group has an anything-goes
approach that allows ample room for surprise. Sometimes the best way to go somewhere new is
to do whatever you want and see where it takes you. Yet their music also has a down-to-earth
quality, as if they're your best friends or next-door neighbors. Their lyrics tackle real-life
longings in an ambiguous way that leaves room for interpretation. Introspection and mystery meet
in the lyrics and the music, as do emotion and innovation. They hit you in the heart while lifting
you off into space.
Andrew Sallee, Chuck Whittington, and Jason Lewis have been known as Namelessnumberheadman
since the year 2000, though they've known each other since high school and two of them
made music together back then. They made their name in Kansas City through an action-packed
live show which blew away even casual observers and a $5, 6-song CD (100,000 Subtle Times)
that those observers took home and obsessed over. Playing at a variety of venues around KC,
with some of the city's best acts, the group soon received praise from writers at the local
newsweekly, Pitch Weekly, which in 2002 named the group "Best Electronic/DJ/Dance" act. The
fact that they play with traveling indie-rock groups and local rock acts yet can be classified
as "electronic" is a testament to the way they're combined disparate sounds into one unclassifiable
musical animal.
Their live shows start with Andrew on drums, Chuck playing both guitar and keyboards, and Jason
playing keyboards and other devices, but they're likely to switch instruments mid-song, managing
to create more sounds than three people should be able to. While 100,000 Subtle Times was an
impressive introduction to the group's sound, their local reputation was solidified with the
release of their first full-length, When We Leave, We Will Know Where We've Been, released in
2002 on local Urinine Records. That album amplified everything they do; it was bigger, more
layered, more ambitious and more beautiful. It was praised by local press and even slipped
onto the Village Voice Pazz & Jopp Poll due to the unabashed love of it by a couple of
critics. And it's an easy album to love. Rich textures and loads of atmosphere meet sharply
crafted songs. The sonic confidence that album exudes seems like a stepping stone to great,
magical things. Namelessnumberheadman is still very much a Kansas City band -- they're
played only a handful of shows outside of the area -- yet it's only a matter of time before their
name is known everywhere. – Dave Heaton