The Slants

They've been described as "Chinatown dance rock," but the Slants are
far from a novelty act," writes The Stranger, Seattle's alt-rock
weekly magazine. NPR's All Things Considered states that ""It's
tempting to peg the Slants in some existing Asian genre: Canto-pop,
J-Metal, Viet Core....but they're not quite that simple." Incase you
haven't heard, The Slants are an Asian synth-pop band that have been
melting faces off all over the country. Since the creation of the
band, The Slants have toured the country five times, received press
for turning down a million dollar recording contract as well as being
banned from a venue in Portland due to breathing fire, and were the
first and only Asian band to be a Fender Music featured artist.
It was early 2005, when Simon Young decided to leave his group, The
Stivs, to start a synth-pop outfit. In essence, he wanted to create
synthesizer-driven rock n' roll but with an Asian twist. Young knew
about the potential of the band but wanted find the right blend of
musicians to bring the dream to life. Enter Gaijin, who answered one
of Young's numerous calls for Asian musicians. Though he wasn't Asian
himself, the two found a common love for The Faint, Depeche Mode, New
Order, Joy Division, and of course, sushi. After the addition of a few
other key members, The Slants were formed and began playing in
mid-2007.
Within months of their first show, The Slants have found themselves
with attention from international press. Most were captivated by their
energetic live show and their modern twist on a classic sound. In
August 2007, they released a demo version of Slanted Eyes, Slanted
Hearts. Within six months of the initial pressing, the band sold all
1,000 copies of these demos and began preparing for an official
release.
In 2008, Slanted Eyes, Slanted Hearts was released with all new mixes
and artwork, the support of national distribution. The band began
touring relentlessly in support of the album. These cross country
tours included appearances at rock clubs, anime conventions, cultural
festivals, and industry gatherings. Headlining almost every stage they
appeared on, the band has played wit some of the hottest up and coming
bands from Japan such as Ketchup Mania, Candy Spooky Theatre, and Lin
Clover. The Slants also helped celebrate the Portland music scene with
a show at Musicfest Northwest 2008, sharing the stage with Sir
Mix-A-Lot, Hot Water Music, Mogwai, and Vampire Weekend. Attention for
the record continued to grow.
Slanted Eyes, Slanted Hearts has everything that a perfect record
should have: shattering hooks and anthemic choruses, powerful guitar
and keyboard lines, and just the right mix of rock with darker, dance
themes - with an Asian twist. The self-recorded, self-produced, and
self-released record quickly caught media attention, with press from
NPR's All Things Considered, Asian Week (the world's largest English
printed Asian newspaper worldwide), the Asian Reporter, Willamette
Week, Shojo Beat, and the weekly and daily papers of almost every city
that the band stepped foot in.
On the album, Aron's voice powers through songs reflecting of love and
loss, as well as thoughtful prose about struggling with an Asian
identity in American Society. NPR's April Baer writes that "The
Slants' songs about Asian-American alienation don't seem to have hurt
their appeal to white teenagers. If anything, they resonate with kids
whose geeky adoration for anime makes them outsiders in their own
way."
Jen Cho leads the way with danceable synth leads, also adding sultry
back-up vocals in tracks like "Kokoro (I Fall to Pieces)" and "I Want
Everything." Throughout the album, Johnny's guitar adds a rock n' roll
feel behind the synthesizers and AC's pulsating drums keep the dance
flavor alive.
PDX-Pole calls The Slants "controversial but well loved." It's true,
the name has stirred some controversy, bringing the band even more
attention. Bassist and founder Simon Young explains, "Most of the
people that find our name racist aren't even Asian! We're saying to
the world 'We're proud of who we are, we aren't going to hide it.' In
fact, our biggest support has been from the Asian community itself!"
Slanted Eyes, Slanted Hearts reflects some of the same themes. Aron
explains "We have a song called Sakura, Sakura where we take hateful
rhymes about Asians and we turn them into a song about unity and being
proud of our heritage." But the band is more than just sharing similar
ethnic heritages: Jen Cho explains that "everyone pays attention to
our name. We might be met with a lot of skepticism at first. Once they
see us play, they realize that we're serious musicians and not just a
kitschy music project."
The Slants are now poised to take on the world with their own music
and presence, their own name. Like the power of the rising sun, The
Slants are bold, majestic, and filled with unlimited potential to
light the dark ignorance of society...all while melting people's faces
off with "Chinatown Dance Rock!