Rose Dorn have never really fit in. The trio, Jamie Coster, Joey Dalla Betta, and Scarlet Knight, never quite belonged with the masses and always felt like outsiders, that is until they met each other.
“There’s always been this crazy connection between the three of us,” explains Knight. “We clicked musically, but we also felt like we’d known each other for years. We were all outsider kids in school who went through the same coming-of-age thing. When I think of a band, this is how I think it should be.”
Together Rose Dorn make indie rock songs that feel like both commiserations and celebrations of this otherness, resulting in an aesthetic that the band’s bio describes as a combination of “elements of bedroom rock, twangy desert gaze, and melancholic California pop.” After two short EPs, Rose Dorn have just released their debut full-length, Days You Were Leaving, a record which utilises this feeling of being different
Lead single ‘Champ’ sets the scene, a sweet and earnest pop song about the connection between the band members, a gaze back at the high school digital friendship that started it all. “At some point I realized I was dissociating,” says Knight, “cut off from the world around me, only able to feel peace when I was actively connecting with my two best friends through a screen. Nothing else really mattered.” The song comes complete with a video, the debut music video from director Julia Ling Kelleher, which sees a chain of dominoes snake around and tumble in perfect synchrony.
In comparison the opening of ‘Shaking’ feels big and bold, a left-field pop song that sounds like it could’ve been an underground hit in the early 90s. But after around forty seconds things slide to a halt, Knight taking over vocal duties as the guitars subside into a dreamy sway. The song morphs again towards the end, keeping things fresh and dynamic across its three minute run-time. Thematically the song is darker than it sounds. As the band explain, it’s “about a select few experiences we’ve seen spin people out of control, and the coping mechanisms that have brought them back to reality […] from the rejection by a supposed soulmate to the death of a loved one.”
Another song that deals with a sense of detachment, ‘Collar’ finds Knight pining for someone long-gone and the explores the rootless feeling of lacking a clear direction for the future.
I feel like a stray dog
with a beautiful collar
on a beautiful lawn
keep searching for someone who i’ve lost
but there’s no signs on poles
telling me to come home
There’s a considerable degree of diversity across the album. From the hushed slow gathering of opener ‘Big Thunder’, to the short shot of LVL UP-style slacker pop of ‘LRP’ and ‘HYC’, Rose Dorn continue to surprise throughout. ‘Deathwish’ is a standout, all dreamy sweetness meets a kind of morbid matter-of-factness (Rose Dorn exploring their sense of otherness with lines like “Shoelace ‘round her neck, keeps her head on tight, she says she’s talked to god, they’ve been staying up all night”). There’s also a really cool trading of vocals where Knight’s lines sound like dialogue in a short story, giving the whole thing the feel of a strange narrated daydream.
Talking of dreamy, ‘Heaven II’ feels fogged by a sleepy torpor, sparse guitar and cooed vocals combining with minimal percussion to create a kind of slo-mo lo fi pop, while closing track ‘Wish’ is also content to take its own time, although burns bright with a much fuller sound. It’s illustrative of Days You Were Leaving in lots of ways, not least in the way it approaches reflective themes in its own unique, bittersweet, way. It shows that the otherness mentioned at the beginning can often be your greatest strength, and that Rose Dorn have come to value it amidst the shifting seas of life in the twenty-first century. The band put it best in their notes on the album:
“This record is about coming to terms with the complexities of life in time, of learning to love and accept where you’ve been and where you’re going while remembering to love and accept where you are.”
Days You Were Leaving is out now on Bar/None Records. Get it from the Bar None Records webstore or the Rose Dorn Bandcamp page. The band are also playing some West coast shows soon. Check the dates below and head along if you’re able:
Thursday, September 19th – Zebulon – Los Angeles, CA – Ex Hex, Seth Bogart
Friday, September 20th – Starline Social Club / Crystal Cavern- Oakland, CA – Fake Fruit
Saturday, September 21st – Arcata, CA Blondies w/ Spirit Notes , OMW2HEAVEN
Sunday, September 22nd – Portland, OR – Vinyl Underground w/ OMW2HEAVEN
Tuesday, September 24th – Olympia, WA – Le Voyeur – w/ Flying Fish Cove, OMW2HEAVEN
Wednesday, September 25th – Seattle, WA – Vera Project, w/ Dogbreth, Bread Pilot
Friday, September 27th – Boise, ID – Castle Greyskull w/ Buttstuff & OMW2HEAVEN
Saturday, September 28th – Moscow, ID – Modest Music Fest
Monday, September 30th – Reno, NV – Holland Project – w/ OMW2HEAVEN
Wednesday, October 2nd – Las Vegas, NV – TBD
Thursday, October 3rd – Phoenix, AZ – Trunk Space w/ Like Diamonds, Gabi JR., OMW2HEAVEN
Photo by Derec Patrick