Music seen at Geno's, July 7, 2007  
By IAN PAIGE  |  July 11, 2007
 
The Sharp are dead. Long live the Sharp.
Diamond Sharp’s mutating line-up hit gene-pool pay dirt with the band’s tightest display of musicianship ever for this unfortunate final show. We don’t, however, believe a word of it. With frontman Jason Rogers’s knack for finding the best backup for his perfectly remiss pop songs, it is hopefully inevitable the band will be reborn.
Jay Lobley of Cult Maze offered his bass prowess, which, combined with departing drummer Joe Brown (we had no idea he was so good!), created an intense rhythm section perfect for the frustrated ferocity that’s been developing out of the band’s irony-laden pop origins. Derek Lobley’s stoic presence on keyboards provides a density needed to ground Rogers’s lashing guitar, increasingly more British Invasion than college rock.
Rogers’s lyrics frequently refer to death as an end-all, be-all that puts our little problems into perspective. Well, there’s a strong association with death and metamorphosis. You’ve got to die a little bit to change. Judging from Diamond Sharp’s newer songs, a resurrection for the band will mean less self-pity and more rock, angrier and wise enough to know that the love you need is around in your own damn hometown. Check out “The Love You Need” on the band’s MySpace page to fill your heart with hope for more Diamond Sharp in the future.
On the Web
Diamond Sharp: myspace.com/diamondsharp
 
 
  
 Related
 Related:
And then some..., Cult Maze, Treble Treble release party, More  
- And then some...
 Aside from the second season of  Mad Men , Barack Obama, and Puppycam, I think we can all agree that it was a pretty mediocre year in national pop culture.
- Cult Maze
 Early on in Cult Maze’s all-too-brief tenure as Portland’s best indie-rock band — probably when they were still called The Funeral — I offered to buy Joshua Loring a beer before his set.
- Treble Treble release party
 Treble Treble release party at SPACE Gallery, November 27
- That’s just super(groups)
 You know, ideas are the easy part. It’s the execution that gets tricky.
- Diamond Sharp’s Jason Rogers and Cult Maze
 What do you do when you’ve got at least an album’s worth of great songs and no band to help you play them? Diamond Sharp’s frontman Jason Rogers decided to rip his heart out, let it drip all over the stage of Geno’s Rock Club, and then enlist some Portland all-stars to help him mop up the mess.
- Billy Bragg
 There is no irony in the title of Billy Bragg’s first album in six years.
- Lil Mama
 There must be a name for the phenomenon of a child actor aging too quickly on the set of a film, right?
- Life after The Sopranos
 If you’re a  Sopranos  fan, you remember the demise of Christopher Moltisanti in an overturned SUV.
- Punk rock redux
 Try reimagining early punk as some physically intense and massively popular athletic contest.
- Solo shot
 Gary Louris had no grand designs for the beginning of his solo career.
- Dance, monkey: Josh Gondelman
 She’s an adorable human pod concealing an unidentifiable intergalactic devil-spawn species of peanut.
- New day rising
 As a member of alternative punk band Hüsker Dü and crunch-pop outfit Sugar, Bob Mould became legendary for blissful guitar melodies and personal lyrics that explored his inner angst.
- Less  
 
 
  Topics
 Topics: 
New England Music News
, Entertainment, Music, Jason Rogers,  More  , Entertainment, Music, Jason Rogers, Jay Lobley, Derek Lobley, Less
, Entertainment, Music, Jason Rogers, Jay Lobley, Derek Lobley, Less 