This ambitious 2-disc set harnesses the full dramatic
gestalt of deep bass, cello, drums, synth and the incisive
power of spoken word. A brooding seven-minute post-rock
preamble sets the stage and dodges such description
as “like a darker Mogwai” by way of concluding
without the explosive climax it seems to hint at, leaving
listeners tense and braced for the firm, almost punishing
poetry to come. Alex Caldiero’s strong-arm poetics
then seize center stage for the rest of Disc 1, conjuring
themes at once unnerving, surreal, vaguely apocalyptic
and yet disarmlingly objective. It’s a lot to
take in a single sitting – best spread out over
sporadic listenings – as his poignant and painstakingly
enunciated delivery eventually grates as much as it
engages.
Accompanying this mind-bending ride is the
entirely instrumental Disc 2, featuring eight tracks
of the talented band speaking boldly for itself in
more conventional song form, as opposed to noir-ish
noodling it is relegated to while supporting of Caldiero’s
coffeehouse antics. Songs range in length from three
to eight minutes and treat listeners to the cathartic
triumph the album opener whets one’s appetite
for, in track 6 especially, which peaks with a righteous,
well-harnessed explosion of guitar squall and crashing
cymbals. The strings in the following number nod distinctly
to Faith No More’s “Woodpecker From Mars” while
the piece before it brandishes a noir-soaked blues
keyboard reminiscent of Ray Manzarek. It’s a
shame such versatility couldn’t be more evenly
distributed between both discs, however the shadowy,
metal-spirited heart of this worthwhile beast is a
promising contribution to whatever genre future critics
divine for it, and the set itself is an definite accomplishment.
Favorite: Disc 2, Track 6
Steve Gunn is a hard-boiled suburban New Yorker with
a PhD in rockology and the propensity to point with
full-throttle moxie up to his ears and unflinchingly
declare, “Hey! These things ain’t garbage
cans, y’know!” sisterray@myway.com