Description
Illiterate Light thrives on subverting expectations. Though just a duo, the Harrisonburg,
Virginia-based singer-guitarist Jeff Gorman along with Nashville, Tennessee-based drummer
Jake Cochran make surprisingly pummeling and thoughtful alternative rock. Since the band's
2015 inception, they've intently focused on their unorthodox live show with Cochran standing
behind his kit and Gorman playing synth bass with his foot as he sings and strums his guitar.
Fiercely egalitarian and independent, the two not only split up songwriting duties and
arrangement ideas, they even built bike-powered stages: bringing the fans into the live
experience and envisioning a greener future for shows.
But with their latest album Sunburned, out January 27 via Thirty Tigers, Gorman and Cochran
have turned their attention inward to their songwriting and studio craft. It's their most
fully-realized and ambitious LP yet, one that's full of immediate songs that update and
revolutionize the band's approach to making music. There are rich keyboard and programmed
percussion textures now populating their songs, as well as soaringly anthemic choruses, and
hefty doses of fuzz. "On our first record, we were very live-focused and wanted to make sure
whatever we were writing was translated in person," says Gorman. "Without that crutch, we
could be more adventurous and take more risks. We definitely weren't timid in the studio."
Though their 2019 self-titled debut garnered rave praise from the Washington Post, Spin, and
NPR as well as led to tours with The Head And The Heart, Shakey Graves, and Rainbow Kitten
Surprise, Sunburned is a document of a band pushing themselves to new heights. With the
success of their debut, Gorman and Cochran decided to double down on their bond and their
commitment to the band. "We built our own studios, decided to release the album ourselves,
and leaned into being multi-instrumentalists while recording," says Gorman. Between Cochran's
studio at his Tennessee home and Montrose Recordings in Richmond, VA with longtime
collaborator and producer Adrian Olsen, they started fleshing out the earliest versions of the
songs in intense writing sessions.
As their writing started, Gorman's father died after a years-long battle with multiple system
atrophy (MSA). While his grief was devastating and palpable, it also gave him clarity and
newfound motivation. "These songs aren't about my dad dying but there's been such a shift in
my own life that my own writing took on a certain fearlessness," says Gorman. "I saw the thin
veil between life and death and I realized there's nothing to be afraid of anymore. I wanted to
embrace the things I love and the weird things that'll come to us in life. My grief found its way
into the record, sonically and emotionally, but not topically."
Lead single "Light Me Up" exemplifies this cathartic energy with Gorman singing, "Another
nightmare / Another ghost / I'm just a shadow on my own / Waiting on the sun to light me up."
It's a rejuve