Those of you not from upstate NY
may have a hard time relating to just how brutal our winters are. Not just in terms of temperatures or
precipitation, but the length of time that they last, and the amount that it
really does get to us up here.
Granted we all have pretty tough winter skin, and multiple layers of
clothing on most of the time, but it does begin to beat you down when the sun
is only out till 5pm. This
has been the longest winter for me in recent memory, and I am glad to say that
as it (hopefully) is winding down.
As we prepare for the few months of beauty that upstate has each year,
it is good to listen to something that reflects on the conflict and beauty of
what almost 7 months of cold can
do to us. Enter Mono (the band,
not the ailment).
After being on a post-rock kick for
the past two months, I felt like I needed a break. I figured moody, ethereal and drone-y seemed a little one
dimensional to keep writing about.
However…I hadn’t listened to Mono.
Now I have, so anyone reading this will have just ONE more post-rock
album blog to trudge through. Feel
free to skip ahead if you think you know how this one goes.
Mono: Holy Ground *Live in NYC* is
an incredible journey for the mind.
I can equate it to being stranded in the snow, forced to reflect upon
the decisions that have lead up to the present. A bold statement?
Yes. But as a proprietor of
introspective head trips, I am all
for this type of ambient guitar washy-ness (plus did I mention that there is an
orchestra behind them?), and the album builds to so many climaxes that it lets
the band’s dynamic range move it along rather than relying production tricks.
I can only hope that Premier Guitar does a
“rig-rundown” (youtube video explaining their pedal boards, amp choices and
guitars) on these guys soon. I want
to learn their ways. The fact that
this album is live and sounds so damn good is incredible.
So after today, no more post-rock
reviews for a while…I just listened to the new Saint Vincent, so keep your eyes out next week!
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