IMC Listening guide
Best weather to enjoy this song
Sunny day
Best time to listen
Midday energy boost
Best place to listen
On the road, At home
Does this song haunt the silence?
Impossible to forget
Goosebumps scale
Chills guaranteed
Our thoughts
Sometimes you only need a few seconds to understand that a song deserves your attention. “Lie To Me”, the latest single from Seattle band Marsalis, does exactly that. Dennis Zender’s voice arrives almost immediately and sets the tone. Strong, confident, and impossible to ignore.
Marsalis formed in West Seattle in 2016 and is built around three musicians: lead singer and guitarist Dennis Zender, bassist Adam Bishop and keyboardist Theresa Cadondon. On stage the band performs with additional musicians, including a drummer and a second guitarist.
One thing we appreciated right away with “Lie To Me” is the way the band allows the song to grow naturally. The track runs a little over four minutes and actually takes time to introduce itself. There is a real introduction, verses that settle in, and a chorus that arrives when the moment feels right. That may sound simple, but it is becoming rare today. Many modern productions jump to the hook as quickly as possible in order to secure a stream. Marsalis clearly chose another path.
The melody quickly sticks in your head, but the structure of the song deserves just as much credit. The bridge is a perfect example. It is often the most delicate part of a song, yet here it works beautifully. Vocal harmonies appear, the electric guitar steps forward, and the section builds patiently before leading into the final chorus.
Lyrically, “Lie To Me” deals with a difficult emotional situation. The band describes the song as an "exploration of the moment when someone tries to give a relationship another chance while slowly realizing that the situation may already be unhealthy. Feelings, attraction and shared history can blur the reality of what is happening".
One line stands above the rest, and it is also our favorite in the entire song: “but the sugar seems sweeter than the pain”.
That sentence alone says a lot. It describes how easy it is to hold on to the good moments while quietly overlooking the damage happening at the same time.
Musically, the band shows impressive control. Theresa Cadondon’s keys add beautiful colors to the arrangement while Adam Bishop’s bass playing keeps everything moving with good fluidity. His work becomes especially noticeable near the end of the track as the arrangement briefly strips down. The bass supports the guitar before Zender returns with that final line once again: “but the sugar seems sweeter than the pain”. The song closes on that thought in a way that feels completely natural.
Despite the difficult theme, the overall atmosphere of the track remains energetic and uplifting. The melody stays with you long after the first listen, and the production reveals small details when heard through a good pair of headphones.
They will soon bring that energy back to the stage. On March 21 the band will perform at The Crocodile in Seattle, one of the city’s best known venues. Grab your tickets! If you know the history of that place, you know it hosted many important names over the years, including Nirvana long before the band became world famous.
Marsalis already played there in 2017 on the same night as Flagship. Funny detail for us at Indie Music Center: we still have the Flagship CD sitting on our editorial shelf among the albums artists have sent us over the years, after we featured them in 2018. The music world can feel very small sometimes!
This upcoming concert will take place in the venue’s largest room, something that rarely happens for a local independent band. The show will also be all ages, which has become increasingly complicated to organize in Seattle due to local regulations and the disappearance of smaller venues.
Meanwhile “Lie To Me” continues to circulate online and has now passed the 60,000 stream mark. The track has also been featured on our "New Indie Music" playlist for the past four weeks, where it quickly became one of the songs receiving the strongest organic support from listeners.
Marsalis remind us that sometimes the simplest things remain the most effective: a strong melody, musicians who clearly understand each other, and a song that takes the time to say what it needs to say.
Marsalis's take on "Lie To Me"
It’s hard to find the balance between giving a relationship a chance and accepting abuse, isn't it? There are a lot of variables but the emotions/attraction/history can muddy the water. You can see people that put up with a lot and try to stay connected to people when it’s obvious the situation is unhealthy... We can get caught up in the good "feels" when they happen and then not give enough weight to the bad ones that are dragging us down. Are we being honest with ourselves about these relationships? Should we re-examine?
A bit more about Marsalis
Marsalis released their self-titled debut EP in 2016. The record quickly found its audience in the Pacific Northwest and was later voted Pacific Northwest Album of the Year by readers of Northwest Music Scene.
In 2018 the band followed with a second EP, “The Assault On Silence.” The project brought Dennis Zender, Adam Bishop, Theresa Cadondon and Philthy together around a set of songs that pushed the band’s sound a little further.
Since then Marsalis have played a number of well-known venues on the West Coast, including The Roxy in Vancouver, The Crocodile in Seattle and Whisky-A-Go-Go in Hollywood. Several of their songs have also received radio airplay across the region, with a few stations even picking them up as far away as Boston.
In early 2018 the West Seattle Herald described Marsalis as a band “on the cusp of fame.”
Reach out to Marsalis
Lyrics
Lie to Me… Lie to Me
Words are meaningless
Cheap and free
Lie to Me
All your stories seem to contradict each other, baby
Your excuses seem to fall like the rain
And it seems I’m being taken to the cleaners
But the sugar seems sweeter than the pain
Oh,
Lie to Me… Lie to Me
Words are meaningless
Cheap and free
Lie to Me
You rent a space within my heart you’ve never paid for, baby
An open tab on all my insecurities
I spill my guts and you inflict on me a fever
But the sugar, it seems sweeter than the pain… oh yea
Lie to Me… Lie to Me
Words are meaningless
Cheap and free
Lie to Me… Lie to Me
I feel so pitiful
Full of my insecurities
You capture the worst of me
You push me away
When you lie to me baby, yea
When you like to me baby, yea
When you lie to me, lie to me, lie to me
When you lie
Lie to me… Lie to me, yea, oh yea
Words are meaningless, yea
Cheap and free, and free, and free
Lie to me… Lie to me, oh yea
I feel so pitiful… oh so pitiful
In my insecurities, yea
But, the sugar seems sweeter than the pain
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Picture by Scott Butner
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