Filed under: Miscellaneous, Music | Tags: logo, marley & me, music, myband, pets, TREOS
As a band, we’ve been putting together a list of things for our label, Zerobudget Records, and one of the things needed is our most current logo. Since we’re writing new material, we figured a logo refresh would be nice. We’ve been voting amongst ourselves, but I thought it might be cool to get some input from the public.
Click on the image below to get a full resolution view of the logos.
We need a little help making a decision. In the poll, vote on which design you like best: 1 through 6, or staying with the current logo.
I appreciate your votes, it will help us in our decision making!
I saw Marley & Me for the first time tonight. Yeah I know, that was sooooo two years ago. I already knew the ending, but even still, I couldn’t hold back tears, especially since I grew up with a wiener dog and dread the day when she’s no longer with us. My mom has this saying that if you have never loved an animal, there is a special part of your soul that has never been awakened. I think this is true, and having loved many animals over the years (and currently… I love my geckos and our wiener dog), I can attest to the special bond you form. It’s reassuring to me that there is a God, because when you think about it, it’s very strange that we have such real relationships with dogs or other animals. To bring a different species of being into our homes and make it a part of the family is just not natural. It’s supernatural. God provided us with animals for so many purposes. They provide us with food, clothing in some cases, and companionship. He provides.
Besides the poll, this is a fairly disappointing post. There isn’t much to say because there isn’t much going on in my life that I haven’t written about already. Still working on the new song. Still listening to TREOS a LOT. Probably about 79% of the time I listen to music now, I listen to TREOS, and that is wonderful. People always think I’m crazy when I tell them I can listen to a CD over, and over, and over, and over, and over, and over, and over again. I tell them, “obviously you haven’t listened to The Receiving End of Sirens! If you’d like your life changed, look them up!” Seriously. They are the best band that’s ever made music. Screw you, Beatles. I’m going to get crucified for that last comment by a lot of angry people, I’m sure, but there’s no written law saying I have to like the Beatles. And I don’t.
Okay now I’m rambling. I’m going to sleep.
I wish I had a career.
I watched you steal away a man’s best years with the drumming of his fingers and the kicking of his heels. I watched you put away your sweetest sins. I watched tempters satisfy with the sweet taste of wasted time.
Oubliette (Disappear) – The Receiving End of Sirens
Filed under: Music | Tags: concerts, music, music writing, recording, shows, TREOS
This morning I came across my friend Jeff Sparks’s Facebook post about having an extra ticket to the show at Station 4 tonight. I had the date on my calendar for months because of the truly epic lineup, but then it sold out before I got a ticket and I figured I wouldn’t be able to go. As luck would have it, I got to go, and it was one of the better shows I’ve seen.
The lineup included:
We Came As Romans
For Today
The Word Alive
Woe, is Me
Texas in July
Lions Lions
All the bands were seriously impressive, minus WCAR. They had a rough day with their tour bus breaking down and arrived to the show about 20 minutes after they were supposed to start playing. They didn’t seem quite in sync throughout the show, and to say their singer had a rough go of it would be putting it nicely. Still, glad they made it. For Today was there and they always bring the fury of the Holy Spirit. Hearing their lead singer Mattie preach to a crowd of kids is awesome. He’s so on fire for God. Although I must say it is a little weird to hear a crowd cheer when Mattie speaks of Jesus Christ, and then hear them passionately sing along to other bands’ with lyrics laced with the F-word. The juxtaposition was just… interesting. All in all though, good show.
I was looking for jobs the other day when I came across one that looked so right up my alley it was ridiculous. It was entry level for someone in with a physics degree who has taken optics courses and done optics research (i.e. me). And then I looked at the location: Rochester, New York. Oh well, hopefully something like that comes along here.
It’s nice to be working on music again. Pouring effort into this new song and getting it recorded as we’re writing it is a good escape for me. It takes my mind of the issues that press on my mind constantly. Writing it with Hunter, who’s living in Marshalltown, IA, is a lot of fun, and the distance is not hindering our efforts whatsoever. I’ve never written a song this way, writing while simultaneously recording a demo version of it. I think it’s going to be helpful because once it’s finished, it’ll be easy to present and convey what the general idea of the song is, which can be hard if it’s all in your head and all you have is lyrics and a chord progression (or less). Looking forward to finishing it and recording it for real. It’s certainly our most ambitious work to date, and I still have doubts we’d be able to play it live. We’d definitely need a track playing in the background. There’s a lot of electronics going on and about 4 guitar parts (for a band with 2 guitarists. Yesssss.) To give you an idea, the song sounds like us, but with a strong TREOS influence. Coincidence? No. I love TREOS, and emulating them in our own way makes my musical side happy.
I’m seriously wiped out.
Going to bed.
On a final note, congrats to my friends Brice and Colleen LaBelle for tying the knot today!
I’m the fervor of the fever you can’t sweat. I’m the garment, stuck to your skin, drenched and dripping wet. I’m the spring of flowing fume and fret. I’m the melody stuck in your head.
The Crop and the Pest – The Receiving End of Sirens
… gecko day. I know how exciting that sounds. If you didn’t know this about me (which would mean you didn’t read the “About the Author” on the left column there…) I own two juvenile New Caledonian crested geckos named Morgan and Adrienne. I had plans to spend time today cleaning out my terrarium and trying to solve my humidity problem. You see, my geckos need a decently high level of humidity (60-80%) on a regular basis, though the tank should be allowed to dip lower (preferably not below 40%) throughout the duration of the day which would help control mold. Well, with how dry my house is, I would spray my terrarium in the morning and upon checking it a few hours later, the humidity would have plunged to 15-20%!!! My poor geckos must have been in so much pain.
I felt like a change needed to be made, and given the fact that the terrarium also needed to be cleaned, and the fact that I didn’t work today, I decided it was a good day to show my geckos some love. The first change I decided to make was trying a different substrate. I had been using CocoSoft loose coconut fiber, which looks okay but I don’t think it’s been holding moisture well. Plus, at the time I was planning to replace the old substrate with new substrate, I couldn’t find my CocoSoft. I headed out to Petco (or Petgo, for some… you know who you are) and got a big sack of EcoEarth ground up coconut fiber. It’s finer than the loose material, which concerns me a little bit as far as feeding my geckos crickets goes. If they lunge after one that’s walking on the ground, they can accidentally ingest some of the substrate and this can cause impaction, which can lead to death. When it’s time to feed them crickets again, I might take them out and feed them outside the terrarium, at least until they’re bigger and can handle ingesting trace amounts of coco fiber.
Next I headed to Cub Foods to address my next problem. Even the filtered Buhl water I had been using for my geckos was leaving very bad water spots on the glass. I did some research on how to prevent this without using distilled water, which can be harmful over time. Apparently, reverse osmosis water leaves the least amount of water spots, and fortunately Cub Foods has those dispensers of it where you fill your own jug. A cool 69¢ later, I was on my way home.
Upon spelunking in the basement some more, I found my terrarium box, in which was my bag of CocoSoft and terrarium moss. I didn’t care much about the CocoSoft, but the terrarium moss I decided to use to my advantage this time around. Once I emptied the terrarium of all contents (minus the background which I think is actually impossible to get out without breaking) I gave it a thorough cleaning with vinegar and water and let it dry out. I then put down the base layer of Hydroballs, follwed by a square of window screen to act as a liner, and then I poured the EcoEarth down into a good floor layer, spraying between additions to dampen it through and through.
Once the base layer was down, I had to figure out how to arrange all of the main components. I have a J-shaped piece of Mopani wood that has always sat on the ground and leaned against a side of the cage. I wanted to find a way to have the Mopani wood off of the ground and have it seem like it’s coming out of the background. I came up with a clever suspension system and hung the wood (haha euphemism) at about mid-level in the terrarium. After arranging the piece of driftwood and all the foliage, I decided to start getting creative with the moss. Its absorbent qualities help keep the humidity up for a longer period of time, so I arranged some on the floor of the terrarium to look natural around the base of my driftwood piece and then got creative in hanging it all over near the ceiling of the terrarium. I used it to cleverly conceal the suspension system. It looks quite lush and tropical in there now. I’m quite pleased.
This evening I went over to my parent’s townhouse to help my mom who has a broken foot. I brought over catfish and macaroni and we made fried catfish in her cast iron skillet and President Reagan’s recipe baked mac ‘n cheese (YUMMMM). Delicious. When I came home this evening, I was pleased to see the humidity in the terrarium had dropped to just below 50%. I think I might have a winning setup here!
I’ve been looking forward to the day when they’re more grown up because I want to eventually build a vivarium for them. I’d get a bigger terrarium, make my own background, and set it up to have living plants and a waterfall and a misting system and all the deluxe works my geckos deserve!
So that was my day. Full of gecko care and good food. Oh, and of course listening to The Receiving End of Sirens pretty much all day. Of course. Let’s be honest here.
This would have been the first post in a long time that I hadn’t mentioned music at all. Well. I mentioned it. Mission accomplished.
Sticks and stones won’t break my bones… it’s the branches and boulders I shoulder
Pale Blue Dot – The Receiving End of Sirens
Filed under: Music, Songs That Make You Think | Tags: lyrics, music, songsthatmakeyouthink, thereceivingendofsirens, weightlessunderwater
Part of me died the day that The Receiving End of Sirens broke up. It almost seemed unfair for a band to only release two masterpieces and then call it quits. Everyone knows a band’s third album is (usually) their best. TREOS had destroyed the “sophomore slump” with The Earth Sings Mi Fa Mi, and I could only wonder what marvels would manifest on their next album. The news of them breaking up marked this first time one of my top favorite bands broke up. I’m dreading the day Emery does the same. Fortunately, after that day, they had at least one more gem in them. When they released the vinyl of Between the Heart and the Synapse they recorded a new song, with ALL of the members, including Casey Crescenzo (now of The Dear Hunter). The song formed a perfect blend between BTHATS and TESMFM. It gave us an idea what TREOS would sound like had Casey never left. It’s bittersweet, because I love The Dear Hunter but I loved TREOS first. Anyways, they released the new track “Weightless Underwater” with the vinyl, and it is impeccable. Naturally their lyrics are stunning and I had to include them:
The Receiving End of Sirens – “Weightless Underwater”
And all of my time was wasted
In filling a void between now and then
I felt fatigue and complacence
So sing me something sweet
Lull me back to sleep
Because the place I thought I was no longer is…
Please just slow down
Let me catch my breath
I swear I never meant to move this slow
I’m standing around and around
Never meant to fall
Never meant to fall behind
All these woeful wanderings
Just hanging from a string
Tethered to my foot and leading
Just snares underfoot
Nets under my steps
All these mindless musings
Are moving me along
Keep me chasing my tail
Around and around
This merry-go-round
A heavy weight
Fell over me
A calming comfort in the tones
All the blankets of this world
Can’t keep me warm
Please just slow down
Let me catch my breath
I swear I never meant to move this slow
I’m standing around and around
Never meant to fall
Never meant to fall behind
Sing me something sweet
Lull me back to sleep
I’m just a child cradled in my mothers arms
Sing me something sweet
Lull me back to sleep
I can’t slow down this carousel
We spin around in circles
Say something soft
Say something sweet
It’s a blur before my eyes
My world is whirled around me
Drifting in and out
Lull me back to sleep…
Please just slow down
Let me catch my breath
I swear I never meant to move this slow
I’m standing around and around
Never meant to fall
Never meant to fall behind
I’m just a child screaming in my mother’s arms
Sing me something soft
Sing me something sweet
I’m just a child screaming in my mother’s arms
Just sing me something!
=================================
I love this song soooooooooo much.
I can’t wait to get off work. Last night Hunter sent me a new section he had written for our new song and it’s amazing. I love writing with him. We mesh really well and he gets what I’m looking for. Excellent, excellent man.
TREOS needs to record one more album.
Seriously.
Somehow, for now, this skin will have to do…
The Receiving End of Sirens
Filed under: Miscellaneous, Music | Tags: life, lyrics, rant, struggles, thoughts
I started writing a new set of lyrics today. I’m hoping they will take place of the ones I had started to write for the new song Hunter (my guitarist) and I are working on, the one that was originally about not having a topic to write about.
Well, I found a topic. I’m going to be transparent and speak plainly on this. I’ve gotten to a point where as I do some examination of self, I am really, sincerely unhappy and disappointed with what I see. It’s not simply a superficial thing, either. It covers all the pillars of who I am: physical, emotional, mental, spiritual. I am happy with myself in none of those areas. Physically, I’ve never been in good shape, and I’ve kind of come to accept that I probably never will be. Every time I make an attempt to build an exercise regiment, I end up injured, costing my parents thousands of dollars in medical bills since I’m on their insurance until I find a real job. I have had two knee surgeries, a major shoulder reconstruction, and my other shoulder could use one too but needless to say I’m not chomping at the bit on that opportunity. Now I’ve been plagued with bad skin on my feet with several causes that has made walking painful. I’ve gotten used to dealing with constant dull pain my entire life (as I write this post, my repaired shoulder is aching considerably), but sharp pains still smart pretty bad. When I get stressed, I harbor tension behind one of my shoulder blades (today my left, which coupled with my shoulder pain feels just awesome.) My joints simply can not handle my 320ish pounds of weight, and when I try to work out to ease their burden, they give way and I get hurt. It’s lose-lose. It’s exceedingly frustrating. I really want a brand new body. Seriously. I’m so sick of this one. I feel like I got a lemon. Heaven can’t come soon enough. Oh. And I’m colorblind. I swear my body is just generally broken.
I let my emotions get the best of me all the time even though I swear otherwise. I have a very difficult time staying positive about things in general, and I consistently find myself leaning towards the cynical. While cynicism is a good strategy for acting like I don’t let it get to me, it’s also depressing at the same time. While I have a fairly good handle on my mind, my heart seemingly runs amok. I lie to myself that I can keep it reined in, but it’s becoming exceedingly clear how untrue that is. I have no heart-control. I find myself making rash decisions based on emotion and not on thought; it’s something I’ve personally spoken out against and claimed immunity from. I also get into doomsday mode real quick when my emotions go that direction. I just found out I probably can’t defer either of my two biggest student loans, putting my monthly payment at ~$550/mo. Add in rent, bills, gas, and food, and I’ll barely be able to make ends meet, if at all. Naturally, I feel like I’m handcuffed to a boulder being dropped into the ocean, and the huge weight of these loans is impossible to get out from under. I enter a state of despair. It’s all over, my financial future is ruined, my life is ruined, my parents’ financial future is ruined because they’re cosigners on my loans. Every time I job search, I get depressed at the lack of entry level jobs that I’m qualified for. I spend hours upon hours combing job boards and I’m lucky if I come up with one possible job. It’s exasperating and frustrating, and it gets me down. I wish I could have the ability to control my emotions and keep them in check when it hits the fan. But I don’t have control.
My mental incompetence has become glaringly evident to me lately as well. I honestly think my IQ has decreased consistently since I was younger. My common sense fails, I make stupid easy decisions, I don’t have the answers for any problems I encounter. It’s also become increasingly evident that I SUCK at communication. I thought I was “supposed” to be intelligent because I’m a physics major. Yeah, well, I’ll put those rumors to rest. To say I struggled through my curriculum as a physics major is a HUGE understatement. To this day, I can’t even say I understood 60% of what I “learned” at Bethel. So then I look at my credentials and consider what kind of responsibility I’d be given in a position that would provide adequately for my financial needs, I realize how unqualified I am for the jobs I’m looking for. It’s no surprise I haven’t been hired yet, or really even been given any interviews. Somehow, they know I can’t do it. When it comes to song writing, I get frustrated when I listen to bands I love and hear how creative they are and how much better they are at making music than I am. It’s so frustrating, and it makes me want to just give up for the day, which is usually what happens. My inspiration is gone. My creativity is gone. Everything is a result of forcing myself to do it, not drawing from true creativity or inspiration. I feel like my brain is an old computer with components that are slowly burning out one-by-one.
In fact, this is a good comparison. I feel like my self, my body, who I am, is a machine that is falling apart and breaking down. It’s deteriorating. Dying. And then I look to the ghost in the machine. The soul. My spiritual life has never been strong. If I had to describe it, I would put it like TREOS did in “Wanderers”: “I’ve learned to smolder, all smoke but no flame.” I’ve been in a spiritual rut for years upon years, and I haven’t figured out how to climb out of it. I’ve prayed about it, as well as you can pray when your spiritual life is cold and lifeless. I’ve turned to others asking how to get out of it, but what works for one doesn’t necessarily work for all. I’ve even turned to a pastor.
My life has ground to a sickening halt. I’ve found myself in a middle class rut. A ravine with steep walls and no footholds, and I can’t figure out how to get out of it. Hopefully this is just a season of my life, because I’ve been waiting years for the time when I’ll be happy with my life and myself. I think I’m not supposed to be happy; at least that’s not the point of life, obviously. But it surprises me how generally unhappy I’ve been throughout my life. It’s like I’ve been waiting for some good thing, I’m not sure what, for a long time and it hasn’t arrived. I feel like my life is waiting to begin, because these 23 years so far are NOTHING to write home about. They haven’t amounted to much. If I die tomorrow and at the pearly gates am asked “this was your life, what do you have to show for it?” I really wouldn’t have anything. All I could say is that I was raised to mostly follow the rules, as far as following rules in which I could get caught for breaking them. There’s plenty of rules I’ve broken out of the public eye. So there’s nothing. What do I have to show for my life?
I don’t have an answer. I don’t have any answers. I have a list of Sunday-school answers that I don’t know how to implement, such as “oh, well you just have to pray about it” and “oh, you just need to do it. Don’t try to do it, trying is having the intention to fail. Just do it!” (Nike, or something). All I know is that I’m aware I have a problem. I admit that I have a problem. Isn’t that the first step to some program? So I have a massive problem with no solution. And the problem is all that there is. It is life. Can you comprehend how frustrating that is for someone who studied science and wants to solve problems?
I think this might have shifted from self-deprecation to self-abasement.
I want to start life over. I feel like I’ve messed this one up beyond repair. The problem is, in life, there are no restarts. You can’t start over again.
I fear this rut is endless. This is reality. This is the rest of my life.
The new lyrics are tentatively titled “Denuo” which is Latin for “anew” because I want to start over, to be remade anew.
“Take me back to where I was before I was born… it’s like sweet and dreamless sleep. It sounds like heaven to me…”
Timothy – As Cities Burn
Filed under: Miscellaneous, Music | Tags: brain vomit, frustrations, music, new years resolutions, song writing, work
I just realized something. I am very good at writing good, original, catchy music in my head. I can construct full instrumentation, vocal melodies (and even lyrics occasionally) almost on a whim. I also realize that the process of extracting the constructed song from my head is impossible. I can’t brain vomit a song all out in one piece in physical form. I can have a song constructed in my head, and if there were a speaker I could plug into an input jack on my brain to record it, I would have soooooo much better music actually written and recorded. In the physical, aural world, I can only construct songs piece by piece. I can write lyrics without a melody, a melody without lyrics, a chord progression, a lead line, a piano part, even drums which I don’t even play! But I can’t write physically write them all at once. I start with one piece, like lyrics, add a melody, start working out chords, and gradually build it from there. This shows. There’s something about most of the music I’ve written that I could almost compare to “The Uncanny Valley” with digitally synthesized human beings. Something about the music is lacking. Something is just not right, and I can’t put my finger on it.
I’ve been arduously (sometimes) working on my band’s new track that we’re going to record for our label’s 25 year anniversary compilation. I had mostly complete lyrics written for them, but I became increasingly dissatisfied with them. For one, they’re written on the topic of not having anything to write about. The lyrics detail the failures of the brain and the end of inspiration. As good as some of the alliteration and clever rhyming scheme are, it just feels… forced. Plus, I don’t really want what might possibly be the last song we record as a band to be about not having anything to write about. Fitting as it may be as a band’s last hurrah, it would also be lame. I’d rather go out like a lion than like a lamb. The song itself I “love.” I put love in quotation marks because I do love what we have so far, but there’s still something missing. The ever elusive sound I’m looking for isn’t there. There’s a lack of energy I’m trying to fix. Also, there are elements of the song, such as the outro, which I have written in my head, but the theory, I fear, will turn out to be better than the practice. I want the song to end with an aural assault akin to the denouement of TREOS’s “Pale Blue Dot,” and in my head, I can hear it and it sounds fantastic. But I don’t know how to properly translate it from what I hear in my head to what everyone’s ears will hear. It is very challenging and frustrating to have this ideal and be unable to express it in the physical world.
I’m writing this in the security car at work, and my shift, which by work standards is incredibly slow, is actually going pretty darn fast. I think that if 8 hour shifts in which there isn’t much going on go by quickly, it means you are ready to undertake a full-time career. Now if only I could find that career. Seems to be like finding a needle in a haystack these days, except that there’s one needle in a field of haystacks. I want to pull my hair out, but it’s buzzed (i.e. too short to pull on).
One entry on my minuscule list of New Year’s Resolutions is to blog more regularly. I’ve tried that in the past, without much success. Let’s hope this time something sticks.
Oh 2011. How inviting you are. I gladly say goodbye to 2010 and hope for a much better year this time around.
2010 = most disappointing year of my life
2011 = ?
I hope at the end of 2011 I can replace the question mark with “most exciting/successful/wonderful year of my life.”
Through God, all things are possible. Let it be so.
Filed under: Music | Tags: emery, music, my favorite albums, my favorite music, thefelixculpa, thereceivingendofsirens, top albums, Underoath
When I write a music review, I’m not getting paid for it. I’m not being assigned an album and told to review it. When I write an album review, I review an album that I either specifically like, or by a band that I like. I don’t review music that I don’t like because I don’t want to listen to it (i.e. rap “music” – at least any rap music you’d hear on the radio. Contrary to popular belief, I actually do like some rap music. Good rap music is very hard to come by.) For an album to deserve a review from me requires that I either like the album upon listening to it or that it is by a band that I enjoy listening to and would consider myself a fan of. Naturally, this would appear to make me a little biased in my reviews, and I think that’s a fair statement. You probably think I only give 5 out of 5 (or 6 out of 5) star reviews. This isn’t true (case in point, read my review of VersaEmerge’s self titled album). However, most often I’ll write a review for an album because I’ve been listening to it and have fallen in love with it, and the review is usually my explanation of why.
Given that this is my blog, and mine alone, with no quotas or expectations, only freedom, I write what I damn well please without worrying about a superior being upset about it, or about anyone who happens to read it thinks of it. Frankly, I write what I want, and if you disagree, that’s your right.
It is with these disclaimers that I bring forth The Four Masterpieces. I’ve been listening to music for as long as I can remember, and I would honestly rather go blind than deaf because I don’t think I could function without music in my life. Music can speak to every fiber of my being. It can speak to my heart and emotions, bringing tears to my eyes, anger to my lungs, and a smile to my face. Music can also speak to my mind. It can challenge me with lyrical depth, astonish me with instrumental complexity, and frustrate me with unrivaled creativity. That is why I love music and listen to music and write music and play music. It is what I am most passionate about, it is what challenges me and frustrates me and astonishes me and moves me.
My friend Andrea told me that, when I speak about music, I use the word “masterpiece” too much. I begged to differ, and explained that there are only four albums in my music library that have earned that title. The Four Masterpieces are the four albums that have a special place in my heart and mind. They are four albums which, from start to finish, have no weaknesses. They are perfect through and through. They are, in my honest opinion, four of the best albums ever written. I know people will disagree, but the beauty of this is that it’s my opinion and yours doesn’t matter in my selection of The Four Masterpieces. I don’t care what your favorite music is, that’s not what this post is about. This is about my elite four albums that have changed my life.
They are as follows:
- THE FIRST MASTERPIECE -
The Felix Culpa - Sever Your Roots
Most of you have never heard of this band. I am so sorry for you, and consider the knowledge of them my favor to you, that you may listen to their music and have your mind completely blown. I was shown The Felix Culpa in early high school by a youth group leader who knew the band personally. This was back in the days of their EP Ancoro Imparo. This band embodies everything that is good about music. Their honestly original writing and undeniable passion saturates every second of Sever Your Roots. No one could listen to lead singer Marky Hladish belt out his lead lines and say he’s faking it. With every word his voice is inundated with passion and emotion. You won’t find auto-tune or any form of vocal correction on SYR; everything you hear is indeed how it was sung. Every little imperfection and strain and falter in his voice has an intentionality that shows that this is a real person with real emotions and feeling, not some digitally perfected ideal voice. It is really refreshing to hear someone put so much passion into his voice without worrying about it being perfect, because we’re human beings and we aren’t perfect and none of us can sing perfectly. Beyond Marky’s vocals is the instrumentation. The Felix Culpa’s guitars have a trademark dirty sound that is consistent through all of their work; one of those telltale characteristics that always lets me know I’m listening to a Culpa song. It’s an unmistakable, unique and quintessentially trademark sound. Their writing and song structure I would describe simply as being genuine and honest. There is nothing contrived or recycled in their notes, chords, melodies, rhythms or hooks. Everything is thoughtfully constructed into giving the feeling that says “look, this is who we are. We’re the Felix Culpa and you haven’t heard anything like us before.” If I had to come up with a band that is similar to The Felix Culpa I would have to say Come Now Sleep-era As Cities Burn, simply in the fact that they have a unique guitar sound and original writing. Sever Your Roots will always hold a special place in my music library. Ironically, Sever Your Roots seems to hearken back to the roots of music writing and recording. It isn’t over-produced. Much of it was recorded live with numerous musicians in a room playing together to capture the emotional ebb and flow that is only present in live performance. Some of its spirit reminds me of Thrice’s The Alchemy Index Vol. IV: Earth. In its complexity, it is simple. It has an earthy, grassroots feel to it that hasn’t been tainted by big budget labels ordaining the next pop icon. It is the most primitive of The Four, and thus, the least forced and most sincere. It’s raw. It’s perfection. It’s raw perfection.
- THE SECOND MASTERPIECE -
Emery – …In Shallow Seas We Sail
Emery has always either shared or held sole position as my favorite band ever since I heard them in the days of The Weak’s End. Their dual-frontman approach instantly captivated me because it opposed the dogma that you need a lead singer, not more than one. There’s seemingly a false belief that bands must have a leader, and can’t be led by committee. Emery takes that claim and turns it on its head, proving that, indeed, two are better than one. Having two lead singers instead of one opens the door for complex vocal layering and harmonies that would be impossible otherwise. Sure, one lead singer can layer his own voice in the studio, but you don’t get the best of both worlds as you do with two. Emery has Toby Morelle, who’s voice is has more of a raw side compared to Devin Shelton’s velvety smoothness, while both possess the support for powerfully driven vocals while often brandishing the oft forgotten vibrato. Having two excessively capable vocalists to command dual vocal parts has proven to be a boon as Emery has taken it’s place in the upper echelon of Seattle-based super-label Tooth and Nail Records. My full review of ISSWS is viewable here.
- THE THIRD MASTERPIECE -
Underoath – Ø (Disambiguation)
I believe I wrote my longest blog post/album review ever when I reviewed Underoath’s new album a little over a week ago. Seeing as that was a 1700+ word post, I’m not going to go into it much here beyond saying that I believe Ø (Disambiguation) is indeed the album of the year 2010. It is, quite simply, an astonishing accomplishment by a band that, by modern measurements, should have been dead a long time ago. Instead, they rolled with the punches and released an 11 track magnum opus born out of adversity and battesimo del fuoco. It is truly an epic and firmly holds its seat as one of The Four. There is not a moment of weakness in it’s 38:25 runtime. It is, fittingly, a masterpiece. The full review of it is viewable here.
- THE FOURTH MASTERPIECE: THE MAGNUM OPUS -
The Receiving End Of Sirens – The Earth Sings Mi Fa Mi
What can I say about this band? From the first time I listened to “This Armistice” on TREOS’s debut album Between the Heart and the Synapse I was hooked. So many things made me enamored with TREOS. Their vocal complexity was the first. When they recorded BTHATS they still had now-departed Casey Crescenzo in their ranks beside Brendan Brown and Alex Bars, giving them not one, not two, but three lead singers! Given my love for Emery I knew that I would love The Receiving End of Sirens. The rich aural canvas they paint with layered vocals on top of layered atmospheric tapping guitars and deliberate electronics and synth brings a sonic cornucopia of textures and melodies and harmonies that no other band that has hit my ears could possibly pull off. Their sound is very busy, but not messy. It is lush and vibrant, holding new surprises with every listen, which is what keeps them in lasting position as my favorite band. Every time I listen to specifically their instrumentation, I am dumbfounded. Dissecting parts of every track reveal new guitar lines or synth lines or bass lines that blend in unless listened for. The parts don’t get lost, but instead fit in like a tree in the background of a forest painting. Sure, one probably wouldn’t notice if it was missing, but once heard, it is evidently a critical part, even given it’s status as a background texture. The depth is astounding and what gives TREOS’s music lasting appeal for me. When The Earth Sings Mi Fa Mi was released, I had followed it closely, read about it, listened to tracks, and waited with great apprehension the day when I could drive to Best Buy and pick up a physical copy. Upon popping it into my CD player, I drove. And drove. And drove. From the industrial beat of “Swallow People Whole” to the scorching guitar riffs and regretful sorrow of “Stay Small” to the ultimate climactic zenith that is “Pale Blue Dot” I listened. For an hour and 22 seconds, I drove around Shoreview and Roseville just to listen. No album I had listened to, from start to finish, felt like such a masterpiece. Every song played a part, told a story, and while there isn’t a song with the “get up and move” feeling of BTHATS‘s “Planning A Prison Break,” collectively these songs are each a thread in a weaving that must be viewed as a whole to be truly appreciated. TREOS’s ambition with this album towers to heavenly heights: to write an album around the two conceptual pillars of the breakdown of a family and Johannes Kepler’s theories on the tonal qualities of planets in their orbits, particularly earth as she sings “mi fa mi – misery famine misery” is a daunting task that they boldly attempt and triumphantly complete. Beyond their musical prowess is their lyrical intelligence. TREOS has always amazed me with their lyrical sophistication. Wielding a diverse vocabulary, an affection for alliteration, and deep and challenging themes that capture the feeling of each record, their lyrics paired with the intricacies and deftness of layering of their vocal lines remain a talent most sought after in my musical writing attempts. Their music is layered in such a way that all parts fit and aren’t stepped on. Each part has it’s place and purpose, and they all complement each other. Familiar melodies are borrowed too, and while it might sound corny, the use of the melodies of “The Ants Go Marching” and “This Little Light of Mine” do not sound childish or juvenile in their execution, embellishing the nature of “The Crop and the Pest” and “Wanderers” respectively. The lyrics address some very difficult topics, as well, from the pain and emotional damage experienced by a child of divorce in “The Salesman, the Husband, the Lover” to the regret of bringing someone into this world in “Stay Small”. ”Stay Small” is one of the most challenging songs I’ve listened to, where from the perspective of a parent the question is asked “is it love to bring my child into a world full of pain and despair where they will dance with demons and be corrupted? How I wish my child would never grow old and stay innocent.” The entire album comes to a head with the twin seven minute epics “The Heir of Empty Breath” and “Pale Blue Dot.” In particular, “Pale Blue Dot” is the perfect apogee to the oeuvre of TESMFM. I can think of no better way to close an album than this prodigious track, which is brimming with quiet, latent apprehension and tension that explodes on the second chorus and leads into a thundering denouement where, as per word of the band themselves, a vocal line from every track of the album is knit into a sonorous fabric of aural bliss that is as devastating as it is beautiful. ”Heavy, we’re so heavy” rings out amongst decorative guitars and glockenspiel bell tones and the track hits its climax. It then dies out as delicate strings, synth and guitars sing under angelic bells and the guitar lingers as long as it possibly can before dying in conclusion. ”Pale Blue Dot” is the crown jewel among a sea of precious stones. It takes all respective parts and sets them into their seats in the collective crown, bringing to conclusion an album of extraordinary vision and exceptional implementation. The result is what I believe to be the best album ever written. Every time I think I’ve found something that could push its envelope, I listen to TESMFM again and am reaffirmed in its superiority. It is truly, genuinely, ultimately, and undoubtedly a complete masterpiece. A work of art, not just an album. Not twelve songs slapped together and thrown to the masses, but twelve precious stones, twelve Mona Lisas, twelve slices of perfection, twelve masterpieces. Indeed, masterpiece may be on too small a scale for this record. Its twelve tracks form a bona fide, quintessential magnum opus. It rises above the other three masterpieces and holds its place as Magnum Opus, The Great Work. To not listen to this record is tragedy.
Filed under: Album Review, Music | Tags: album review, Disambiguation, disambiguation review, music, Underoath, underoath review
Album: Ø (Disambiguation)
Band: Underoath
Label: Tooth & Nail/Solid State Records
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disambiguation - clarification that follows from the removal of doubtfulness or uncertainty of meaning or intention
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I’ve been a fan of Underoath since their album They’re Only Chasing Safety and my affection for the band’s music increased with their next release, Define the Great Line which saw a turn to a heavier, darker sound than TOCS. Define the Great Line remains as one of my favorite albums all time, and I have followed Underoath closely ever since. Underoath sent shock waves through the post-hardcore music scene when they announced they were parting ways with their last remaining founding member, drummer/singer Aaron Gillespie. Many fans were unsure how Underoath would cope without one half of their vocal team and very capable drummer. To fill the void left by Gillespie, UO brought in drummer Daniel Davison, formerly of Norma Jean, and screamer Spencer Chamberlain was given full vocal duties. Prior to this record, I hadn’t heard Chamberlain sing much. Just a few parts on their last album, Lost in the Sound of Separation, which proved that he indeed could sing. If he could carry the torch as lead singer was yet to be seen. His ability to bellow out a wide range of screaming vocals was never in question. Naturally, I was interested to hear the new sound, to hear Davison’s chops since he left Norma Jean, and to hear how Chamberlain would handle full vocal responsibility.
The album kicks off with “In Division,” and right away, Chamberlain’s guttural screams are prevalent as ever. Within a minute, he gives us a taste of his singing, which isn’t as crystal clear as Gillespie’s, but certainly edgier and less “emo.” With the chorus, more evidence of his singing prowess as he belts “living inside a hole, they put me underground where they could never find me unless they dig me out.” I must say that I am quite impressed with his range and command. Ominous beefy guitar tones from arguably my favorite guitarist, Timothy McTague, dominate the musical landscape, and drop B has given them a dark and thick sound.
The next song “Catch Myself Catching Myself” is a 6/8 number with a good rhythm, and that familiar UO feel to the verse. Chamberlain again breaks into singing on the chorus as he cries “I want to watch them burn it down so I can breathe again.” The song addresses inner turmoil and fighting with your own mind while you fend off those attacking you. The outro is crushing as Chamberlain screams “oh inside of my head, where they thought they would win, but I got them right where I want them.”
“Paper Lung” begins with a distant conversation and instantly reminds me of Norma Jean’s album Meridional. When asked his biggest musical influence, Davison answers the Deftones, and that influence is certainly evident here. The entire song has a real Deftones vibe, with heavy guitars, but a drawn out, mournful melody lamenting “it’s too late to pry away…” The lyrics of the song seem to talk about someone who is becoming fixated on something unhealthy and the singer is mourning that he didn’t act sooner to try to pull the person away from what’s destroying them. The song is the hidden gem on this album. It sounds so different than most of UO’s prior work, and the Deftones influence is executed tastefully. The lush texture and sadness of the track is what really pulls me into it. There are many vocal layers and the guitars blend wonderfully. One thing noticeable is that until the last minute or so there is no screaming in the song, and Chamberlain lays to rest all doubts I had of him being able to carry the vocal load. The song ends in a surrender, with Chamberlain screaming “It’s too late to pry you away from the undertow, I watch it take you then I walk away…” This track shines out among the rest, which is really saying something considering the quality of the album.
The following track is “Illuminator,” which, if I’m honest, is a very familiar, typical Underoath song. It has a lot of the same intensity and beat as some tracks from Lost in the Sound of Separation, with the real notable difference being Chamberlain’s vocals instead of Gillespie’s. It’s not a bad track and the chorus is certainly catchy and has a spooky vibe.
“Driftwood” is a very different track for Underoath. It is to Ø what “The Blue Note” was to TOCS. It has a very electronic feel, starting with a helicopter-like chopping noise. Reverb-laden drums enter as Chamberlain sings “what a sad, sad picture to paint, of a dirty, dirty little soul… we are so blind here… won’t you watch us all fall apart…” I would be interested to hear if the guys in Underoath listen to The Receiving End of Sirens, because this track reminds me A LOT of their masterpiece The Earth Sings Mi Fa Mi, one of the best albums ever written. ”Driftwood” reminds me a lot of bonus track “Weight/Wait” from TESMFM, with very similar bass and vocal styles and overall rhythm. As a fan of TREOS, I like this song a lot.
The next song, “A Divine Eradication” is probably the heaviest song on the album. It starts with thunder and doesn’t relent until it has your attention, and then unexpectedly breaks into a clean vocal line over rapidly rolling toms. Underoath’s knack for off-beat guitar lines is everywhere, and Davison’s history give this song a very Norma Jean feel.
The next track, “Who Will Guard the Guardians,” starts with a bang. There is a dominant guitar note that rings repeatedly like a bell tower that gives the track a looming feel. The middle of the song has a vamping section where watery backup vocals continuously build as Chamberlain distantly yells a rally cry to the abandoned. Given that this album was produced by Matt Goldman, who just recently worked with Oceana on their Clean Head EP, I had to smile a bit at the section repeatedly following the rally cry, as it evokes comparison to the off-meter vocal style of Clean Head, and Chamberlain even says “I swear it’s worth saving us, we pray for the sun to dry us up, I need a clearer head to see what we’re worth, there’s still life left down here to revolt, oh I know what it looks like from there, a loss of control to this place and we’re set to extinct.” I don’t know if this is a nod to Oceana or not, but as a fan of Oceana, I appreciated it. This calm section promptly ends with Chamberlain’s roar “REVOLT! REVOLT! WE STOOD BY DEFEAT FOR SO LONG!” bringing the song to an intense conclusion.
“Reversal” is another song like “Driftwood,” with predominantly electronic themes and sinister synth echoes joined by overdriven drum and bass. The song slips into a chaotic cacophony as a cry of “Deviate my life!” from Chamberlain emerges.
The chaos subsides as rapid tom and bass drum kicks off “Vacant Mouth,” a high octane track that again recalls Lost in the Sound of Separation, particularly the intensity of the track “The Only Survivor Was Miraculously Unharmed.” Chamberlain belts “This is what it feels like, this is disintegration, this is what it feels like, this is isolation!” For Underoath fans, this song should be mostly familiar territory.
“My Deteriorating Incline” will probably push “A Divine Eradication” for heaviest song on the album, and it certainly feels very Norma Jean, especially during it’s clashing 6/8 breakdown. It hearkens back to speed punk-metal, and contrasts nicely with its neighboring tracks.
The closing track is fittingly entitled “In Completion” and starts with a pad build that sounds almost like a soundtrack. Excellently mixed drums lead in with a fill and instantly I can feel the Deftones vibe returning, especially when Chamberlain begins singing. As the chorus kicks off, I was literally stunned with how high Chamberlain goes on his line “tonight I fail, but I never wanted to let you drown without me… tonight we are the only ones to watch it fall apart…” All of the sudden I feel the song “Falling From the Sky: Day Seven” by Norma Jean had to influence the section where Chamberlain sings “We fall deeper into the ground, this night’s never looked so hollow. I wanted to share this with you. I’ll wait ’til it opens up again, sit here ’til the water reaches our necks, finally get to watch them wash away my name.” The song then breaks into silence, except for a synth drone, and a vicious breakdown explodes where Chamberlain roars “Open your lungs, follow me down! Open your lungs, follow me down! I set this off, keep swimming, keep swimming, Oh God I am emptier than you!” The song then comes down in intensity as the drum beat keeps dissolving into less and less and the song slowly dies out as a fitting end to the album.
Overall, Ø (Disambiguation) lived up to it’s name. Wherever there was doubt or uncertainty, the band has put it to rest with this masterful piece of work. Underoath is alive and well, and the fact that they have no remaining original members is not going to hinder their progress to the elite in the post-hardcore scene. Ø has leapfrogged Chiodos’s album Illuminaudio as front-runner of my list for the top album of 2010. Yes, it is that good, and you would be doing yourself a disservice by not listening to it. I know there’s a lot of people who don’t like Underoath because they’re too popular for them to like, or are getting too mainstream because they’re so well known. Well, to those people who won’t listen to this album, it’s truly your loss. Discriminating against a band on those grounds is foolish, unless we’re talking about pop music, which is all garbage. Ø (Disambiguation) is the opposite of garbage. It is a huge step forward for a band that could have taken a huge step backward. It is the result of what happens when you stare uncertainty in the face and give it hell. It has been refined in the fires of adversity, and has emerged a masterfully forged work of art. Truly, a masterpiece.
Verdict
6 out of 5 stars
I haven’t given a 6 out of 5 since Emery’s …In Shallow Seas We Sail, and I don’t know if I ever will again, but this album is really that good. Do yourself and those around you who ever hear you listening to music a favor and purchase this when it is released on November 9th.
Today is the day where everything came crashing down. The rose-colored glasses shattered. Naivety got the best of me. I don’t know how I believed that everything in reality would work out the way I had played it in my head. I foolishly assumed everything would work out on its own. I never questioned my academic decisions and the career path I had chosen. It was all going to work out in the end. No real reason for that assumption. My fear for change has crippled my future.
I could have gone to Madison for mechanical engineering as an undergraduate and possibly continued on for grad school, at least setting myself up to be more attractive to the job market. But no. I didn’t want to leave Minnesota. Why? Why did I insist on staying here? What is there here that makes staying so worth it? So I went and struggled through college and obtained a BS in physics with a mediocre 3.28 GPA. A degree that apparently isn’t going to get me where I want to go, where I intended to go. My plan to go to graduate school came crashing down when I found out I most likely won’t get funding if I want to study design, which is definitely what I want to study. I can’t afford to add another $48,000 over two years in student loans to my already substantial $52,000+ debt. So while at work for my internship at Xcel Energy today, having finished everything that needed to be done that day yet sticking around to get my full 8 hours in, I did some job searching. Turns out, you have to have 2+ years experience for any job worth working or any job reasonably within my interest. Why did I just assume I would leave college and glide right into the ideal job of my choosing? So here’s my reality: I have three options. A.) I work an entry level job doing something unrelated to anything I intended when I went to school for my degree, and most likely dislike what I do. B.) Go to Madison for graduate school in mechanical engineering with an emphasis I’m not interested in and don’t want to do, but POSSIBLY hook a research assistantship with some funding, or C.) Go to Madison for graduate school in mechanical engineering with a design emphasis, receive no funding and rack up a total of over $100,000 in student loan debt, hopefully landing a good enough job to pay off the debt before I die. Talk about your lose-lose-lose situation. No matter what I do, I’m going to be either unhappy and paying off loans for the rest of the foreseeable future, or potentially happy but paying off loans for much longer than the foreseeable future, with no guarantee of a job anyways. Why did I believe this would all work out? It’s such foolish, immature naivety to think everything would be smooth sailing. Making the “smart” choice isn’t always the right one, I suppose.
Reality is in and of itself a bleak, sad reality. Why do I feel so forgotten? God said he would never abandon me but it doesn’t feel like He comes around much anymore. Old friends have moved on with their lives, seemingly only keeping touch with those who have done as they have and gotten married or engaged. Living on the assumption that I would be moving away has left me with few meaningful relationships, as I preferred not to get so attached that leaving the state would be painful. Everyone else seems so happy. Like either their rose-colored glasses are still in place, willingly or unwillingly, or they were fortunate enough to make right choices instead of self-defined “smart” ones. Or perhaps they just don’t care. They’re too carefree to be burdened by the weight of the world. But I can’t bring myself not to care. I can’t. I have too many responsibilities. Responsibilities to my future family. I took this path because I believed it would give them a better life.
Maybe I’ve been too selfish. Maybe my own happiness isn’t important. Maybe I should just work the best job I can hook, no matter how much I loathe every minute of it. Maybe, maybe, maybe. I don’t want maybe, I want to know what to do. But I don’t know, and I can’t hear God’s voice, and trusting and believing what other people have told me is what’s gotten me here. I bought into their claims. Claims that getting this education will set me for life, will have me up to my neck in jobs. Claims that getting funding for a Master’s degree is a lock if pursuing engineering.
So who do I believe. I can’t believe in others. I can’t believe in myself. I want to believe in what God has for me but He won’t tell me what it is… that or I won’t listen.
I’m trapped.
I don’t like reality.
Give me my rose-colored glasses back.
I am a 23-year old physics graduate of Bethel University in Minnesota. The first day of freshman year, my friend Elizabeth gave me the nickname "Thor." It caught on, and many people to this day still refer to me as Thor, even some of my former professors. Some people hate nicknames, I chose to embrace it. Ever since I can remember, I've had an undying love and passion for music, and this blog is where I go to talk about it. I play guitar and sing in the band 






