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Tracks:
1. I Fall So Far and I Fall So High
2. Bursting With Tears I Commit to
Destroying You
3. There is So Much Love
4. This Narrow Room is World Enough
5. Nothing can Stop Me
6. Blue-Eyed and Filled With Horror
7. Take A Look At Me Now
8. What Looked Like Morning Was the Beginning of Endless Night
Release Date:
10/17/05
Catalog#:
crl015
Format:
CD | LP
Price:
$12.00
CD:
LP:
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Review:
"Remember fusion's glory days when albums by The Mahavishnu
Orchestra (The Inner Mounting Flame), Weather Report (Mysterious
Traveler), and Return To Forever (Hymn to the Seventh Galaxy) exploded
with an impassioned energy their albums could barely contain? Sadly,
aficionados also may remember how quickly the genre ossified into
overly complex time signatures and self-indulgent grandstanding.
Though a similar fate could still befall instrumental rock‚ (the
term "post rock", currently outlawed, it seems, within certain circles),
the wondrous Nowonmai (I am no one‚ phonetically backward) serves
definite notice that The Timeout Drawer has no plans to go gently
into anyone's good night. Formed in 1999, the Chicago quartet follows
up its Presents Left for the Living Dead EP (Chocolate Industries)
with an apocalyptic full-length that strikes a perfect balance between
compositional intricacy and fiery execution.
Compositions are epic and episodic, with the group moving from placid moments to
crushing climaxes with aplomb. Despite the material's complexity, it never
sounds forced but unfolds naturally, an impression largely attributable to the
group‚s telepathic interplay. By turns melancholy and crushing, the eight pieces
are gorgeously arranged, with the group‚s guitars-moog-bass-drums core augmented
by strings and, on "Blue Eyed and Filled With Horror, somber horns; the group
even deepens the wide-screen scope of "This Narrow Room is World Enough" with
the soft lull of a flute. The album's longest piece, "Bursting With Tears, I
Commit To Destroying You," smokes and rages with a Crimsonesque fury, the
guitars ferociously roaring before an electric piano brings the mayhem under
control. A delicate interlude at the song's center shows the group as
comfortable with understatement as it is searing meltdowns of barracuda riffing,
flaming synth splatter, and pummeling martial rhythms. When the guitars
collectively stampede through "There is So Much Love," the effect is pure
heaven. Read forwards or backwards, Nowonmai is one beautiful noise.
A final note: the album would be even sweeter had the group included
its recent cover of Mike Oldfield's Tubular Bells (issued as a limited
run 7-inch under the title "The Exorcist") as a hidden track, even
if its inclusion might have ever-so-slightly upset the balance of
the all-original full-length."
Ron Schepper, Signal to Noise
Art by Someoddpilot, Co.
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