Vulture Whale are :
Wes McDonald - Vocals and guitar
Lester Nuby III - Guitar and vocals
Keelan Parrish - Bass
Jake Waitzman - Drums
Out of the indie punk bomb shelters of Birmingham, AL beheld the inevitable union of local heroes The
Ohms and Verbena. Purveyors of hero status records that just about every Southeastern kid worth his
snot in rocknroll would give a nod to as an influence in one way or another. Originally coined as Wes
McDonald and The Fizz, the quartet featured Verbena’s drummer and later guitarist, Lester Nuby III, the
formidable backline of Keelan Parrish on the low end with Jake Waitzman keeping time behind the drum
kit, with front man Wes McDonald aka Terry Ohms of The Ohms holding court lyrically and playing
rhythm and lead guitar. They were simply too well-versed to not be tagged as a cohesive unit, a dream
of a vulture eating a whale by Nuby birthed a new creative vehicle and a band was formed.
Vulture Whale’s 2007 freshmen self-titled effort, released on Nuby’s Ol’ Elegante stamp, was a nearly
perfect southern indie rock record -- tapping the same vein as remarkable debut records by McDonald’s
Ohms and Nuby’s Verbena in 2000 and 1997, respectively. McDonald’s vocal stylings straddle the gap
between The Jam’s Paul Weller and Philadelphia’s G.Love, a slight nod to Mick Jagger, and a shit ton of
Wes McDonald. Nuby and McDonald trade guitar work and form an impervious front with Parrish and
Waitzman, each upholding their end like a jack stud supporting a header in a stick framed house.
Each member bringing their own paint to the proverbial canvas, the ship calmly steered by McDonald
and his musical genius come bar stool comedian take on songwriting --equally drenched in Parliament
Funkadelic , Marc Bolan and T.Rex, as the Ramones. That’s been the "plam" from day one, take it
everywhere and nowhere at the same time. They’re better than steroids were for baseball and OJ was
for Ford Broncos, beautifully exotic yet weaving the basket between perfect indie pop and obtuse punk
funk. Ever entertaining and genre bending, Vulture Whale is a cornucopia of styles and permutations,
draped in the critically acclaimed shroud of indie rock and its rags.
2016 sees the band’s 5th release, Aluminium, and first on the newly revamped Cornelius Chapel Records
imprint headed up by Dexateens frontman Elliott McPherson. Aluminium is locked and loaded with brain
clinging heady rock numbers, dramatic buildups and genuine American rocknroll of the southern
persuasion with ample crunch and face melting riffs piled up with false euro bravado. Crafty rocknroll
proving yet again why Birmingham is forever a spot on the indie rock map, as deep in talent as it is
cultural history. Aluminium’s release finds it just in time for that early Alabama spring and yet another to
add to their near sixpack of critically definitive indie rock offerings. Maybe we can get another one out
of them before the year is through. –Scott Zuppardo