Posts Tagged ‘At The Drive-In’


16.02.2010

Take One Car: When The Ceiling Meets The Floor

posted by Will

in Music Reviews

Take One Car hail from Millerton, New York and the band would fit right in on a label like Equal Vision which seems to specialize in this kind of proggy brand of alternative hardcore; you know, the kind of bands that followed and seemed to multiply in the wake of At The Drive-In’s demise. Take One Car are quite adept at the sound and manage to keep my attention for much of When The Ceiling Meets The Floor. Which I should say is no small feat considering this style usually leaves me running for the door most of the time. Take One Car do well when they slow things down and let the atmospheres take over. For fans of the genre I think there is a lot to like here but at the end of the day this just isn’t my thing anymore.

Label: Self-Released

Take One Car “The Entropy Sequence”

06.11.2009

Albums Of The Decade: Volume Two

posted by Will

in Year End Lists

If you missed it, I named my Top Ten Albums of The Decade last week. Volume Two-Five of Albums of the Decade will contain my next forty favorite albums but in no particular order. So, here is Volume Two of SAL’s Albums Of The Decade…

Andrew Bird “The Mysterious Production of Eggs” (Righteous Babe – 2005)

andrewbird

The Mysterious Production of Eggs was my first introduction to Andrew Bird and wow, I was smitten from the start. I saw Mr. Bird on tour in support of this album and it only strengthened my respect for him and my love for his craft. Bird is quite simply one of the most talented musicians I have ever seen perform.

At The Drive-In “Relationship Of Command” (Grand Royal – 2000)

atthedrivein

I hate putting albums in these lists that everybody else already has as well. With that being said it is impossible to dismiss Relationship Of Command. The album is a powerful look at a band that burned so bright they had no choice but to fade away.

Broken Social Scene “You Forgot It In People” (Arts & Crafts – 2002)

brokensocialscene

Broken Social Scene’s You Forgot It In People is a wonderful and eccentric mixture of art and indie rock that recalled genre greats like Sonic Youth and Dinosaur Jr. while maintaining a unique personality of its own. The album is all over the place but in an amazingly cohesive kind of way.

Liars Academy “No News Is Good News” (Equal Vision – 2001)

liarsacademy

No News Is Good News is one of the most underrated albums I can think of during this decade. Liars Academy rose from the ashes of Cross My Heart (3/4 of XMH to be exact) and put out this gem to little fanfare and mostly ho-hum reviews. The band took what Cross My Heart was doing in the indie/emo realm and just basically picked up the tempos. I’d also suggest Cross My Heart’s last album, 2000’s Temporary Contemporary, to get a feel for how the two bands related to one another.

Ryan Adams “Heartbreaker” (Lost Highway – 2000)

ryanadamsheartbreaker

The debut that made Ryan Adams into something more than that guy from Whiskeytown. Unfortunately Adams has never quite lived up to this excellence since. Granted he’s put out some great material post-Heartbreaker but this is the one that lacks any filler whatsoever.

Ted Leo/Pharmacists “The Tyranny of Distance”  (Lookout – 2001)

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The Tyranny of Distance falls just outside of my decade top ten. This is quite simply Leo’s masterpiece and shattered any work he had been associated with before. I find myself returning to this album time and time again. The album stands out to me from Leo’s later work cause it has such a romantic and emotional quality to it that seems to be missing from his other material.

The Jealous Sound “Kill Them With Kindness” (Better Looking – 2003)

jealoussound

In regards to The Jealous Sound I always hear people say “well, Knapsack were better” and sure, they would be correct. But to dismiss The Jealous Sound is extremely short-sighted. Kill Them With Kindness may not have been the second coming of Knapsack but it was pretty damn close and proved that Blair Shehan was a songwriter that deserved more recognition.

The Mountain Goats “Tallahassee”  (4AD – 2002)

mountaingoatstallahassee

While I heard Mountain Goats material before this, Tallahassee is the album that hooked me completely. Darnielle’s storytelling lay front and center here as he tells the intimate story of a deeply troubled relationship. It’s as gripping as an album can possibly be and Darnielle makes you feel like an awkward fly on the wall throughout it all.

Up Up Down Down Left Right Left Right B A Start “And Nothing is #1″ (OHEV – 2003)

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As readers of SAL should know I have always been a huge proponent of Up Up Down Down even after they called it quits. And Nothing is #1 was the band’s debut full-length and an overlooked gem by the group with the worst band name ever. I still don’t know how to describe these guys after all these years and maybe that’s why they were so damn good!

Waxwing “Nobody Can Take What Everybody Owns” (Second Nature – 2002)

waxwing

Nobody Can Take What Everybody Owns is the last Waxwing album and it is just as good as the first two and maybe even better. Which of course made the band’s break up that much harder to take. Granted I love Rocky Votolato’s solo work but I’m still clamoring for that elusive Waxwing reunion.

Albums Of The Decade: Volume One

Albums Of The Decade: Volume Three

Albums Of The Decade: Volume Four

19.02.2009

Brass: A Small Breath

posted by Bradley

in Music Reviews

While you’ve been distracted by the latest Johnny Come Lately to hit the streets, the highly lustrous and well polished progressive hardcore quintet Brass have been busy honing their craft and taking over your playlists one song at a time.

Following up on a debut like Set & Drift is a challenge of Obamanesque proportion that would make even the most seasoned take a step back.  Nothing doing here.  I can think of no better way to compliment the organic atmospheres Brass created with Set & Drift than with the beautifully intimate and introspective 3 track EP A Small Breath.  I can only assume that the title means that the band only had enough time for a small breath in between LP and EP.  Or maybe this was just a small breath of the whirlwind of mastery that is yet to come.  Either way, Brass keep cranking out exceptional quality in unprecedented quantity.

And I can’t stop listening.

A quick browse will reveal that Brass have a sound that is agreeably difficult to approximate.  Some say Sunny Day Real Estate.  Others, The Dismemberment Plan.  I’ve seen REM mentioned more than once.  Old Jawbox, At The Drive In — I can’t disagree with any of it.  Brass sound like everything and nothing in an instant.  Part of me can’t help but feel that this is how Genesis would sound today if Phil were in his late 20’s and went to Art School.  Wrap your head around that.

The EP is available for download at the Brasslungs along with 4 new tracks recorded in late 2008.  How thoughtful of the band for sharing.  Be sure to return the favor the next time these guys roll into a town near you.  Or at least give them a high five or something.

Genre: Prog-core (What the hell is prog core? – Will)

RIYL: My Genesis reference

Label: Self-Released

Two Skeletons

01%20Two%20Skeletons.mp3

www.myspace.com/brasslungs

06.02.2009

La Dispute: Somewhere At The Bottom Of The River Between Vegan And Altair

posted by Will

in Music Reviews

La Dispute seems to have drawn a polarizing line in the sand with listeners who either love or hate the band. Frankly, it is perfectly understandable when listening to Somewhere At The Bottom Of The River Between Vegan And Altair. If the title did not give it away, the band is eccentric and overblown as they relentlessly push their own boundaries. Somewhere At The Bottom Of The River is frantic and at times a completely exhausting listen. However, if you get past the initial shock to the system you will grow to see a more nuanced atmosphere that the band is able to create. It is here the band shows off a grander scale that is breathtaking given the attention to detail and depths at which La Dispute operate.

No doubt, the similar vocal style and delivery of vocalist Jordan Dreyer to Aaron Weiss of mewithoutYou is difficult to ignore. But, it is the band’s instrumental intricacies added to Dreyer’s vocal eccentricities that allow La Dispute to penetrate the listener. Echoing the techy, mathy sound of a band like Hot Cross at times, La Dispute run circles around Dreyer’s hypnotic poetic verse. The band are equally adept at creating such a natural flow on Somewhere At The Bottom Of The River. This is an album in the truest sense as it slowly unfolds and each song compliments the entire piece. The only question is by the end of the journey have you crossed over from exhaustion into exhilaration? That will determine what your final prognosis of La Dispute’s Somewhere At The Bottom Of The River Between Vegan And Altair will ultimately be. I will take the easy way out and just say I am exhiliratingly exhausted.

Genre: Post Hardcore/Screamo

RIYL: mewithoutYou, Hot Cross, At The Drive-In

Label: No Sleep

Said The King To The River

02%20Said%20the%20King%20to%20the%20River.mp3

Fall Down, Never Get Back Up Again

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www.myspace.com/ladispute

04.12.2008

SAL’s Best Albums of 1998

posted by Will

in Year End Lists

James at Get Over Yourself had a great idea of making a list of our top records of ten years ago…way back in 1998. Eric at Can You See The Sunset and I of course fell right in line. Probably cause we’re a bunch of music dorks who will end up liking a lot of the same records anyway. Yay for grown men entertaining themselves with nonsense and irrelevant list making! Thanks Twitter! On that note, here are SAL’s favorite albums of 1998.

Alkaline Trio “Goddamnit” (Asian Man)

The Appleseed Cast “The End Of The Ring Wars” (Deep Elm)

Archers Of Loaf “White Trash Heroes” (Alias)

At The Drive-In “In/Casino/Out” (Fearless)

Avail “Over The James” (Lookout)

Braid “Frame And Canvas” (Polyvinyl)

The Broadways “Broken Star” (Asian Man)

Cursive “The Storms of Early Summer: Semantics of Song” (Saddle Creek)

Dillinger Four “Midwestern Songs Of The Americas” (Hopeless)

Elliott “US Songs” (Revelation)

Fugazi “End Hits” (Dischord)

Hellbender “Con Limon” (Reservoir)

Jets To Brazil “Orange Rhyming Dictionary” (Jade Tree)

Kid Dynamite “Self-Titled” (Jade Tree)

Knapsack “This Conversation Is Ending Starting Right Now” (Alias)

Less Than Jake “Hello Rockview” (Capital)

Mineral “EndSerenading.” (Crank)

Mock Orange “Nines & Sixes” (Lobster)

Neutral Milk Hotel “In The Aeroplane Over The Sea” (Merge)

Samiam “You Are Freaking Me Out” (Ignition)

Sunny Day Real Estate “How It Feels To Be Something On” (Sub Pop)