It's been a long time coming, but from the day that young British
songwriter Drew Smith was taught his first chord by older brother
Neil (who has spent time in such notable SF bands as Kingstreet
and Kiss the Girl), there was really only ever going to be one outcome.
It's your typical "older sibling with formal music training
teaches younger sibling how to play guitar only to find younger
sibling is a songwriting genius who himself discovers he still needs
older sibling to help him put a band together and get his songs
recorded" rock 'n' roll fairytale.
After hearing Drew's remarkable songs at a small open mic night,
Neil insisted that they should form a band. Born and raised in England,
the Smith brothers have called San Francisco home for more than
10 years. From the day they began playing together their relationship
was one that occasionally struggled to contain the ambitions and
opinions of the two musicians but which at the same time always
found strength in it. Of course, two musicians rarely constitute
a decent rock band, no matter how good they may be. In Heathrow's
case Australian drummer Mike Rich and the band's lone American,
bass player Paul "John" Castro (formerly of Torn and Two
Way Radio) proved to have the energy and passion for the songs (and
an appropriate level of musical talent) to round out the line-up.
The afore-mentioned result of all this?: "Say It Like You
Mean It", the band's debut full length release, 50 minutes-worth
of superbly conceived Brit-rock (watch Drew wince when the term
"Brit-pop" is thrown around) that finally answers the
question "now that Oasis aren't any good anymore, who do I
listen to?"
Everything that Heathrow's loyal San Francisco fanbase has been
looking forward to is here, plus much, much more. From straight-ahead
rockers a la The Foo Fighters ("New World Record") to
Pink Floyd-esque epics ("Take Cover") the band covers
all the bases. Political drama ("Cambodia" and "Good
Friday") mixes with crowd-pleasing ballads ("Stars",
which the band typically dedicate to "all the girls" at
shows). The band even have a go at electronic music with the help
of top Bay Area producer / engineer Jaimeson Durr (Bob Weir, Handsome
Boy Modelling School, Train) on "Refugee Song". They're
not afraid to wear the influence of a certain Gallagher brothers
on their sleeve throughout the album but "Say It Like You Mean
It" probably bears a closer resemblance to albums by less well-known
but more critically-acclaimed bands such as Supergrass, The Charlatans
UK and Ash.
In the end though, Heathrow is simply Heathrow: 4 musicians with
important things to say, 3 countries of origin, 2 occasionally squabbling
brothers and 1 damn fine debut album.