Empire Empire – What it takes to move forward

Now this album is amazing, this is real emo. If you feel nostalgic for bands such as mineral, appleseed cast, benton falls or penfold, then this album needs to be bought now. it really is that good, when I first heard empire empire  I thought it was a little know emo band from the 90’s I had missed, but no this album came out March 2010.

It is the perfect mix of heartfelt vocals, such as the song i am a snail, and you are a pace i cannot match,

oh, i ought to tell you the truth! i did not to come to plea for you.
where was your heart when your words led the truth anywhere else from you?
you’re not sorry, you are just scared,
i have not come to calm your fears
i am sorry i hid what you are.
but everyone else but me already knew! already knew!
and would not come to plea for you.
where was your heart when they never appeared?
anyone else would care.
but you would not shouldered the weight you should bear.
i will not shed a single tear.

its all delivered in way that mineral would be proud of. The guitars are all jangley, which is a staple for this type of gene, with it all being  in 3/4 or 6/8 timing which is another staple of the gene.

I can not say enough about this album so I will just let you listen to i am a snail, and you are a pace i cannot match.

10 I Am A Snail, And You Are A Place I Cannot Match

Bon Iver – For Emma, Forever Ago

pitchfork have said it better than i ever could:

The biographical details behind the creation of an album shouldn’t matter when it comes to a listener’s enjoyment, but For Emma, Forever Ago, Justin Vernon’s debut as Bon Iver, exudes such a strong sense of loneliness and remoteness that you might infer some tragedy behind it. So, to skirt the rumor mill, here are the particulars, as much or as little as they might apply: In 2005, Vernon’s former band DeYarmond Edison moved from Eau Claire, Wisconsin, to North Carolina. As the band developed and matured in its new home, the members’ artistic interests diverged and eventually the group disbanded. While his bandmates formed Megafaun, Vernon– who had worked with the Rosebuds and Ticonderoga– returned to Wisconsin, where he sequestered himself in a remote cabin for four snowy months. During that time, he wrote and recorded most of the songs that would eventually become For Emma, Forever Ago.

As the second half of its title implies, the album is a ruminative collection of songs full of natural imagery and acoustic strums– the sound of a man left alone with his memories and a guitar. Bon Iver will likely bear comparisons to Iron & Wine for its quiet folk and hushed intimacy, but in fact, Vernon, adopting a falsetto that is worlds away from his work with DeYarmond Edison, sounds more like TV on the Radio’s Tunde Adebimpe, not just in his vocal timbre, but in the way his voice grows grainier as it gets louder.

Vernon gives a soulful performance full of intuitive swells and fades, his phrasing and pronunciation making his voice as much a purely sonic instrument as his guitar. In the discursive coda of “Creature Fear” he whittles the song down to a single repeated syllable– “fa.” Rarely does folk– indie or otherwise– give so much over to ambience: Quivering guitar strings, mic’ed closely, lend opener “Flume” its eerily interiorized sound, which matches his unsettling similes. “Lump Sum” begins with a choir of Vernons echoing cavernously, which, along with that rhythmically rushing guitar, initiates the listener into the song’s strange space.

For Emma isn’t a wholly ascetic project, though. A few songs benefit from additional recording and input after Vernon’s initial sessions: Christy Smith of Raleigh’s Nola adds flute and drums to “Flume”, and Boston-based musicians John DeHaven and Randy Pingrey add horns to “For Emma”; surprisingly, their company doesn’t break the album’s spell of isolation, but rather strengthens it, as if they’re only his imaginary friends. Vernon turns the cabin’s limitations into assets on “The Wolves”, layering his falsetto, tweaking his vocal tones to simple yet devastating effect, and piling on clattering percussion to create a calamitous finale.

That passage contrasts nicely with the simple intro to the next track, “Blindsided”, which builds from a single repeating note into a halting chorus melody that sells his skewed Walden imagery: “I crouch like a crow/ Contrasting the snow/ For the agony, I’d rather know.” Vernon’s lyrics are puzzle pieces that combine uneasily; his nouns tend to be concrete, yet the meanings slippery. On “Flume”, the lines “I am my mother’s only one/ It’s enough” form a strong opener, but the song grows less and less lucid: “Only love is all maroon/ Lapping lakes like leery loons/ Leaving rope burns– reddish ruse.” It’s as if he’s trying to inhabit the in-between spaces separating musical expression and private rumination, exposing his regrets without relinquishing them. His emotional exorcism proves even more intense for being so tentative.

To me this album is the perfect mix of bands such as pedro the lion, rocky votaloto and bonnie prince billy. with a little bit of kind of like spitting thrown in to the mix, the vocal are delicate, and gruff at the same time and it really is a headphones album or deserves  to be played loud .

here is Skinny Love,

Skinny Love

Here’s a youtube vid from Jools Holland

skinny love – bon iver

Caesura – Dear Light Inside.

Caesura are four  guys from Winchester that cite the inspiration for writing their debut EP as personal loss, friendships, the band, being hospitalized and love. Their influenced by Explosions in the sky, The Appleseed Cast, and pretty much any of the old deep elm bands from the 90’s. I personally would call this English emo or post hardcore, but i think people would disagree.

I love the fact that all the songs are over 6 minutes long, and do not rush, building atmosphere and then bursting in to angular upbeat distortion, but make no mistake this album is not that upbeat in tone. The song structures are not very conventional, as in verse, chorus, middle eight. but they offer something really in the currant emo trend, which getting on my soap box a bit has been bastardised by the media and now is banded around as a joke, if you think my chemical romance and you and me at six are emo then this would be a good place to start to find out what emo really is all about.

here’s an mp3 from the album

Oh My God It’s the End of the World