Explosions in the Sky - All of a Sudden I Miss Everyone
Facts
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All of a Sudden I Miss Everyone
Music Price: You save 7%! As of Nov 22 19:37 EST (details)
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| Artist(s) | Explosions in the Sky |
| Studio | Temporary Residence |
| Release Date | February 20, 2007 |
| UPC Code | 656605309927 |
| Buy this item | $13.99 at Amazon.com As of Nov 22 19:37 EST (details) 1 Audio CD, Usually ships in 24 hours, |
Tracks
- The Birth and Death of the Day
- Welcome, Ghosts
- It's Natural to Be Afraid
- What Do You Go Home To?
- Catastrophe and the Cure
- So Long, Lonesome
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User Reviews
Average user review:| Thank you for saving me.. |
| Explosions In The Sky - All of a Sudden I Miss Everyone 7/10 |
However, Midland, Texas band Explosions in the Sky have been making a name for themselves in the post-rock world after rising from the Austin music scene with their widely-acclaimed sophomore album Those Who Tell The Truth Shall Die, Those Who Tell The Truth Shall Live Forever.
Building their reputation on a powerful live show and an ability to harness pure instrumental rock to express emotions better than any lyrics could, they released another successful album and had their debut reissued in 2005. Perhaps their biggest breakthrough was the Friday Night Lights soundtrack, which was almost entirely composed and recorded by the band.
2007 sees the release of All Of A Sudden I Miss Everyone, the band's fourth proper album and one that does not see the band straying from their chosen direction. There are only six songs on the album, but following the trend of their previous releases, the average song length is seven minutes.
Explosions in the Sky specialize in the art of the crescendo. Each of the songs present here is built around them, separating distinct musical passages and acting as a kind of catharsis for the tension that the band builds up on each track. While much of the work here is very effective at this, slowly rising to a climax that is not only anthemic and rocking but also musically intricate and sophisticated, some of the songs never quite lift off, or spend half the time meandering around various guitar licks and harmonics.
Opener "The Birth and Death of a Day" starts off with a screeching distorted guitar playing in a very high register and then proceeds into a guitar-and-drum beat that slowly builds up and then fades away, teasing the listener. Suddenly, a double-bass thunder and a barrage of toms hails a new wailing guitar line that is the climax of the song. This is what Explosions in the Sky does best, unleashing a momentous instrumental fury upon the listener that satisfactorily concludes the song and releases all the energy the band has worked up.
Following tune "Welcome, Ghosts" does pretty much the same thing, but rather than lead the listener around with ambient sounds and quiet, slow guitar lines, it leads the listener to its apex faster and ends with a satisfying roar of guitar and cymbals. Nevertheless, it's essentially a shorter version of the opener. This is the biggest problem with Explosions in the Sky, and instrumental post-rock in general; it can get pretty boring.
The best song on the album, "Catastrophe and the Cure," never lets the listener off the hook, beginning with an ominous guitar line before exploding into a rapid snare-drum-based rhythm and a jolting high-pitched guitar line and only intensifies from there. The ending of the song tops any other on the record by miles.
While the pinnacle of each composition is a truly inspiring musical payoff, the minutes in between can stretch pretty long on some of the songs. Songs like "Welcome, Ghost" and the (relatively) short closer "So Long, Lonesome" mitigate this by creating interesting interludes and keeping them short while still summoning a considerable amount of musical tension.
The 13-and-a-half minute-long magnum opus of the disc, "It's Natural To Be Afraid," suffers the most from the "boredom" problem. It spends its first six minutes in a reverb-saturated echoic guitar haze before finally evolving into an interesting rhythm with an insistent tom beat, but then the song drops back into a simple bass line and wandering guitar. The climax of the song is indeed rocking and meant to be played at the loudest volume possible, but the ten minutes it takes to get to it are excruciatingly boring.
Then again, music like this is meant to be background music, and for that task, few other bands can do a better job. Explosions in the Sky bring the vast desert landscape and rugged beauty of their native Texas to the stereo with unerring precision and musical skill. Few bands can make listeners recall certain times and places and even emotions without singing a single word.
And it helps that they also happen to be pretty damned good at bringing out some straightforward burning Texan rock and roll at the appropriate times. July 24, 2008
| Takes you on an epic journey of Odysseyian proportions |
| Bliss |
| Solid tunes, great remixes |
I must respectfully disagree with the reviewers who casually dismiss the bonus remix CD as nothing but a mere novelty. The remixes RULE, especially the Jesu remix of "The Birth and Death of the Day". I used to listen to that song everyday for about three months straight while I was getting ready for work. This whole album is thoroughly fantastic. March 5, 2008
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