Codeseven
- Dancing Echoes and Dead Sounds
By Mark Hensch
Codeseven
- Dancing Echoes and Dead Sounds
Label: Equal
Vision
Rating:
Northern Carolina's Codeseven has several
key things going for them in the creation of their Equal Vision Records
debut, Dancing Echoes and Dead Sounds. The five-piece features three,
count 'em, three brothers, Jon Tuttle on bass and programming duties, while
his brother James guitars and synths and their other brother Matt drums.
Eric Weyer also guitars, and the group is capped off by vocalist Jeff Jenkins.
Besides the obvious family connection, Codeseven has experience under their
belts, this being the most recent in a fair sized catalog of releases,
though again it is the band's debut for Equal Vision records. Throw in
a producer who helped create the genius Coheed & Cambria albums, and
the strangely buzz-worthy Straylight Run album, Codeseven should soar past
the limits of their past success with their new album.
Sadly, Codeseven falls after rising only
so high. This album is a frustrating mix of quality-shoegazerish pop music
that is well-crafted, intelligent, and implemented flawlessly. However,
it is marred by several pieces of annoying filler, repetition, and a lack
of serious attachment. In other words, I found myself not wanting to listen
to this album all of the time (a rarity be it for review CDs or regular
ones), and when I did the better tracks were often overshadowed by the
lesser ones.
That doesn't mean Codeseven's Dancing
Echoes and Dead Sounds is a bad album. For someone like me, who spends
most of the time listening to heavier genres, on a "chill out" day or around
bedtime, this album is refreshing and good. Soothing, serene, reflective,
and at times (and in the right mood) soft music nirvana, Codeseven is disheartening
on this release not because their music is bad, but because they spend
so much time wasting it on pointless instrumental tracks and trying too
hard.
"La Memiore Reincarnation" is one of those
bland, pointless, and downright aggravating intro tracks so many bands
seem to incorporate lately to make an opening message inherent in the album.
It is a mix of pointless swirls and effects, lasting a bogus 38 seconds,
and not even really a song. Thank God for "All The Best Dreams" a soothing
and mystical mix of airy psychedelic guitars, 80's synths, and top-notch
vocals from frontman Jeff Jenkins. The song even at some points twist into
an overdriven chorus that reflects a heavier element to Codeseven, but
still retains that cloudy sound of serenity and tranquility.
"Pathetic Justice" is an awesome little
depressing ditty with bouncy drum beats constantly skipping along in the
background, piano keys chiming with melancholy, emotional vocals, and later
on some nice distorted guitars.
"Nasty Little Revolution" is the last highlight
for a couple songs, so sit back and enjoy as some effects intro in conjuring
images of Sputnik orbiting dark and lifeless voidal orbits. Later on the
song swirls in with weird effects and synths that echo and bounce like
echolocation, and this song turns out alright. The infuriating "Quail's
Dream" is a short and pointless (i.e. filler) track that is nothing but
echoing and incoherent vocals strung together without rhyme or reason over
quiet and subtle programming.
"Roped and Tied" pays slight homage to
Sparta or something else along those lines but is a little too cheesy for
its own good. A decidedly hard to love, hard to hate track. "The Day That
Doesn't End" is a catchy synth jam. The next track, "Shalo" is more silly
filler that I am not even going to bother to review.
"Alt Wave" is a jingling synth rocker that
is syrupy yet dark, not to mention a good song all around. "The Devil's
Interval" is a highlight of the album; strange drum beats wave in over
a mystical little guitar piece and some seriously spacey vocals. An upbeat
yet sad chorus cap off one of the only truly stunning songs on this album.
"Cherry Tree" is believe it or not, more of that DAMN BLOODY FILLER!!!
The rocking (at least in Codeseven terms) "Sunflower" jams in with blooping
and rolling riffs/effects before going to more alternative synth pop of
intriguing quality.
This album should be better then what it
is. I am generally not a big synth-pop fan, but on the better tracks of
this album, Codeseven almost catch me. Everytime however that they almost
get me hooked, a freaking piece of instrumental buffering floats on, totally
eliminating the connections made to previous songs, still fresh and fragile.
On an album of twelve songs, it is kind of sad that a band obviously talented
like Codeseven puts four songs in as filler tracks. In simplistic math
terms, that's pretty much 1/3 of the album. At just short of 45 minutes,
that isn't much bang for your buck. As much as I don't want to mislead
anyone, I'd, believe it or not, still recommend this CD as the songs that
are REAL songs are actually pretty darn good. If you mind filler too much
however, or beyond that you hate melancholy and sad music played in 80's
style synth-wave-rock, then Codeseven isn't for you.
Let's hope next album that Codeseven will
trim some of the fat and make an album that's more lean, sparse, and stark;
the band shines in moments like these. All in all, I still have come to
the conclusion that there should be more sparks of life In Dancing Echoes
and Dead Sounds.
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