• home
  • concerts
  • users
  • photos
  • music videos
  • interviews
  • editorial
    • music reviews
    • feature articles
    • press buzz
  • basket
  • about
  • blog
log in
register
 
album reviews

Tuesday, April 21, 2009

...and you will know us by the trail of dead
the century of self


     

...And You Will Know Us By The Trail Of Dead are beginning anew. Look no further than the very first line rocketing of their recently released 6th studio try, The Century of Self (Justic/Richter Scale Records). Declaring "New Horizons, unclaimed lands await us beyond the walls of our cantonment" ("Far Pavilions"), Conrad Keely taps into one of the album's central themes from the get go. Free of their major label vice at Interscope Records, Trail of Dead reek of renewal, and in it, give their fans a rich, articulate, yet ultimately free flowing album in the process.

Sonically, The Century of Self is nothing less than an arena sized effort. Gigantic guitar overdubs, herculean drum parts, and swells of tsunami sized keys all provide the basic instrumental makeup, though how they violently buoy about songs like "Far Pavilions", "Bells of Creation", and "Ascending" is ultimately the band's greatest asset. Demanding their listeners traverse a dynamic trail throughout, the band wind and coil between the great heights of their most epic choruses and the subterranean depths of their more subdued break downs. Call it a bi-polar spirit that haunts most of this one, embodied most prominently by the album's six minute centerpiece, "Isis Unveiled".

With such a grand compositional statement on his hands, Keely - not surprisingly - meet's the rest of the band with a series of stories that make their own massive mark on the album. There are very few trials of day to day living that inhabit the lyrical scribbles of Century of Self. Instead, Keely's pen scratches out elaborate images of God, war, mythology, mysticism, and nature for his listener's consideration.

If all this sounds demanding, that's because it is. The Century of Self, like Trail of Dead's previous two albums (So Divided and Worlds Apart), is a complex and challenging listen. But Trail of Dead also make an effort to honor those who dig the straight and narrow, employing enough of their punk rock past to allow a more simple style of immersion to present itself. In the end, how you choose to absorb this one comes down to personal preference. Either way though, I guaranteed you'll find a way to lose your self in Trail of Dead's latest album. - David Pitz

Share To: Share on Facebook Digg It! reddit This Add to MySpace Add to del.icio.us Stumble It! 

Title:
 
  



Reviews:

By Band:
A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  
K  L  M  N  O  P  Q R  S  T  
U  V  W  X Y  Z 

By Date:
March, 2010
February, 2010
January, 2010
December, 2009
November, 2009
October, 2009
September, 2009
August, 2009
July, 2009
June, 2009
May, 2009
April, 2009
March, 2009
February, 2009
January, 2009
December, 2008
November, 2008
October, 2008
September, 2008
August, 2008
July, 2008
June, 2008
May, 2008
April, 2008
March, 2008
February, 2008
January, 2008
December, 2007
November, 2007
October, 2007
September, 2007
August, 2007
July, 2007
June, 2007
May, 2007
April, 2007
March, 2007
February, 2007
January, 2007







ra ra riot
the rhumb line


weezer
raditude


Juliette and The Licks
Four on the Floor



concert videos indie music videos artist interviews new music reviews
about indie music photos music articles blog users get the player report a bug home privacy sitemap
 
  ©2010 baeblemedia.com