U:MACK
present
Red Sparowes
(Featuring members of Neurosis & Isis)
FRIDAY 20 OCTOBER
Castle Inn (also known as The Bull and Castle)
Christ Church
DOORS 8.30pm
TICKETS €16.50 from Road, City Discs, Sound Cellar and online at www.tickets.ie/umack
LISTEN TO RED SPAROWES AT: www.myspace.com/redsparowes
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Soundscape
influenced post rock outfit Red Sparowes return to Dublin on friday october
20. They delivered an electrifying performance in crawdaddy last march.
Red Sparowes
There just might be
a certain warped truth to the phrase "guilt by association." As in the
case of Red Sparowes, its formal associations with such heavy, propulsive
bands as Isis, Neurosis, Angel Hair and Pleasure Forever would lead you
to expect that the Los Angeles quintet's debut would be a masterfully
crafted epic of primal urgency.
It is.
However, Red Sparowes is epic without bombast, heavy without a single
barre-chord riff and eviscerating without any clearly audible vocals.
The chiming, spindly layers of effect-laden guitars and the swinging,
entrancing drums on its Neurot Recordings debut At the Soundless Dawn
create textures reminiscent of Goblin, Tones on Tail, Godspeed You Black
Emperor and early Sonic Youth. Its attack is syrupy and serpentine; subtle
but frighteningly deliberate.
Red Sparowes is comprised of Bryant Clifford Meyer on guitar (Isis), Josh
Graham on guitar (Neurosis visuals and acclaimed video director), Greg
Burns on bass and pedal steel (also of Temporary Residence dark chamber
folk sextet Halifax Pier), Andy Arahood on bass/guitar (Angel Hair) and
David Clifford on drums (The VSS, Pleasure Forever). The album was recorded
with founding drummer Dana Berkowitz (The Cignal) and Isis bassist Jeff
Caxide, both of whom relocated at the end of 2004. The sum total of its
sound, however, stems more so from esoteric melodic guitar-surrealists
of the mid-80's Blast First and Too Pure hive than the fierce realism
of the aforementioned cabal of heavy-psych rock.
At the Soundless Dawn -- an album of seven compositions with titles that
fit together as a complete paragraph -- opens with a rapidly strummed
single high-string building tension as distant, delay drenched notes saturate
an almost dance-beat drum pattern on "Alone and unaware, the landscape
was transformed in front of our eyes." Pedal steel notes add a further
layer of glissando urgency as ringing guitar notes climb hand-over-fist
upon an ascending line. The second track, "Buildings began to stretch
wide across the sky and the air filled with a reddish glow" kicks in abruptly,
sounding reminiscent of the taut and eerie blasts of Italian horror film
soundtrack masters Goblin. Icy, piercing guitars jut out from the speakers
as rapid bass arpeggios drive the tune ever nearer. Comparisons to the
more lulling and lush tunes from the My Bloody Valentine masterpiece Loveless
would not be off the mark for the third track a beautifully constructed
four-and-a-half minute piece of gorgeous, somber guitar work -- although
the band would likely be reluctant to accept such a compliment.
Throughout the album, transitions glide and instruments smudge into a
warm wash of tones. It's an orchestral wall of sound that is equally as
entrancing as it is unnerving. The 12-minute album closer, for instance,
gradually builds tension with clever use of smeared, formless guitar notes
that create a sense of three-dimensional sound as notes seem to move from
background to foreground, flitting around an imaginary room. Sparing tom
drum rolls add to the growing claustrophobia, until ever-rebuilding waves
of strings cascade into a grand crescendo that finishes as mysteriously
as it began.
Although the band members are indeed tied to many other projects, Red
Sparowes is not just a side-project. The band has toured the US with the
Dillinger Escape Plan and label-mates Made Out of Babies, as well as a
very successful headlining European/UK tour in Spring 2005. In August-September,
the band embarks on a full national tour with Pelican, Big Business and
Breather Resist.
While At the Soundless Dawn uses vocals as subtle instrumentation, the
group plans to incorporate voices further into its sound. This stunning
introduction to Red Sparowes, recorded in San Francisco by engineer Desmond
Shea (who also did additional engineering on the recent Neurosis album,
The Eye of Every Storm) is just the beginning for a band that promises
to change the way we think about heavy music. Its family of related artists
is certainly good company. But, where their common goals to experiment
with epic, cathartic music meet, Red Sparowes branches far outside of
the expected boundaries.
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