Canadians are really onto something these days. From blog house to minimal techno to punkish indie sounds, they're a real gift. Put The Rifle Down is definitely in that category, and sounds like the vocals from some of the '80s best gothish new-wave mixed with the current trend toward electro-leaning garage rock. Maybe we should e-mail their free download to Dick Cheney. Ya think?
Put The Rifle Down are a band who could, in theory, be referred to as synth-pop, or dance-rock, or maybe synth-rock, if only such descriptors hadn't been bled so utterly dry of meaning by indie market researchers repping the last ten 'club-rawk' bands you can't possibly remember. Better, then, to err on the side of hyperbole and just say that these dudes are your new New Order. Through scarily pinpoint awareness of both context and texture, the Toronto foursome retain the spare, wiry instrumental elegance of their sleeve-worn new-wave forbears, while bringing their own completely uncynical new pop maximalism. The result is an intensely urgent, modern sound, shot through with flashes of ungraspable familiarity.