Is it a hit, *hit or miss?
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...And
You Will Know Us By The Trail of Dead - Worlds Apart
by Mark Hensch
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posted
03-24-05
...And
You Will Know Us By The Trail of Dead - Worlds Apart
Label: Interscope
Hit, *hit or
Miss?: Hit
Rating:
....And You Will Know Us By The Trail of
Dead (henceforth for reasons painfully obvious, or so I hope, referred
to as simply "The Trail of Dead") picked a fitting name for their newest
release, Worlds Apart. On the band's 5th album, and their 3rd for
major label Interscope records, the Trail of Dead have at last reached
the epitome of their diverse influences. Since their self-titled debut,
to following albums (in chronological order) Madonna, Source Tags and
Codes, and The Secret of Elena's Tomb, the Trail of Dead have gradually
taken their noisy rock leanings and mixed them with an ever-expanding nod
towards classical and pop music, mixing two highly disparate genres and
shattering the musical spectrum into a prism of blinding light. The Trail
of Dead are highly infamous for their chaotic stage endings, bashing and
breaking everything in sight with a rage that surprises and shocks the
unprepared. As their new albums come and go however, the band has kept
that almost punk spirit and integrity while layering their actual music
with softer art rock and elements of classical as well, for a sound that
is almost always elegant, sparse, and perversely graceful.
I say perverse as long-time fans of these
Texan terrors can attest. Frontman Conrad Keely has a strange, snickering
lisp that sounds like a pissed-off Brit popper looking to drop some jaws.
The Worlds Apart thematics will do just that; on one end the band
crafts moving and poignant music only to switch gears into raving rants
that should make various people angry. It will also make slightly fewer
confused: how can this band deride "those c**** on MTV" over samples of
giggling kids and have an instrumental track of symphonic violins? God
only knows, but with so many Worlds Apart nowadays it seems like Trail
of Dead feels those Worlds have plenty of catching up to do.
"Ode to Isis" is a weird way to start an
album. The song has slowly building piano keys, moody choirs chanting an
incantation to the gods of the Egyptian mythos (Isis is the goddess of
love in case you were wondering), and swirling strings and guitars. The
song ends with the spoken line of "...and you will know us by the trail
of dead."
"Will you Smile Again?" is a solid tune
that has arty rock guitars and a plodding drum beat. The song even boasts
trumpet fanfare here and there, and the pounding yet sparkling riffs provided
an excellent backdrop for Keely's melancholic vocals.
"Worlds Apart" should piss tons of
people off, and the band should be happy they have enough guts to make
a song like this. The resonant guitars cascade into a wall of sound as
flocks of children laugh at Keely's frequent f-bomb profanities and his
railing against everything from the rock scene to media fallacies to the
most touchy of subjects, 9/11. I'm pretty open-minded, but this song came
close to making me mad, and so it must be doing something right. It's excellent
irony is the fact it sounds like a happy ditty on pop radio while bashing
gaping holes into things many people hold very dear.
"The Summer of '91" is one of the disc's
best adventures, and this quiet piano ballad is one of the most truly moving
songs I have heard in ages. It could as well be called "The Summer of (insert
year)" as anyone who has ever grown out of their childhoods will relate
to this song. Approaching my senior year of high school and wondering where
I will go from here, the song's glittering keys and distinctly upbeat guitars
struck a very strong chord indeed inside my chest. Single "The Rest Will
Follow" is an airy and open-ended rock track that pounds with a strange
arena and art rock muscle: it's passionate chorus makes for good sing-alongs
and "Follow" is another strong song.
"Caterwaul" has some noise rock experimenting,
Dandy Warhol-ish vocals, and soaring loud art rock choruses. "A Classic
Arts Showcase" is an intelligent rant against television, yet it is fairly
forgettable the first listen or two until the song's strange choir jam
in the middle catches listeners cheerily off-guard.
"Let It Dive" is a watery rock ballad
that is a crystalline and transparent track; guitars soar and drums splash
like huge silver fish in an endless ocean. "To Russia my Homeland" is a
kicking violin interlude that simply rules. "All White" is an odd brit-pop
blinker, and "The Best" is an awesome art rock romp. Closer "Lost City
of Refuge" shimmers with nearly trip-hop sounds, gently rocking the album
to a deep and fulfilling sleep.
Worlds Apart seems to revel in its
own contradictions; soft and heavy, elegant yet crass, deep yet shallow,
sneering yet soft-spoken. I can't help but feel Trail of Dead exploited
these opposites with a clear purpose and there is a deeper message hiding
in this CD most casual listeners will miss. Regardless of which part of
the various spectrums you gravitate towards, Worlds Apart is still
like any other CD; it can terribly alienate people or it can unite them
in ways no one before considered. Consider no matter what this: no matter
how far apart everyone is, ...And you will know us by the trail of dead
fuse so many intriguing elements that all sorts of music fans won't feel
separate at all; in fact, I'd vote quite the opposite. Well, everybody
except "those c***** on MTV" that is.
CD Info and Links
Tracks:
Ode To Isis
Will You Smile Again?
Worlds Apart
Summer Of '91, The
Rest Will Follow, The
Caterwaul
Classic Arts Showcase, A
Let It Dive
To Russia My Homeland
All White
Best, The
Lost City Of Refuge, The |
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