
The Listening
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Track Listings
Discography |
Release Date:
(December 15, 2005)
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Album Review
From the opening moments of The Listening LP, it's clearly the band's name change is not merely cosmetic. Lush keyboards and almost-lazy synth bassline bring the record in as hushed, throaty vocals deliver line after line in a hypnotic cadence. "Glory of the Feared" is one of twelve outstanding tracks that drip, sweat and bleed passion, agony, heartache and hope. Lyrically, Gabriel Wilson is in top form, a romantic wordsmith using potent imagery to convey the depths of despair and the quiet resurrection of hope. With nearly every song topping five minutes, the music has an unrushed, natural quality to it. Chiming vintage toned guitars and stripped down drums combine with synthesizer low end and lots of wonderful keyboard tones . Nothing is forced, transitions are gentle yet dynamic. The listener, in many ways, is akin to a fortunate fly on the wall as four talented men create brilliance on the spot. Fans of the Rock & Roll Worship Circus may very well be disconcerted by the stylistic change, as it applies not only to the music but the lyrics. "Love, the greatest innovation/Emotion intertwined with liberty," Gabriel breathes in "Triple Fascination." One of the standout tracks, "Hosea In C Minor," the voice caresses the words "None of the people who told you can hear it/voices on the telly always led to deceiving/you didn't know you were sleeping with demons." The lyrics are darkly wry, passionate, heated, and certainly uncomfortable. "Press my lips upon your skin/breath the air you're breathing in/taste the taste the heaven in/ where you end and I begin/ want to be in your eyes again/ want to be in your eyes again", or so goes "Be In Your Eyes". The words matter. The band's name points towards the secret: It is in the listening that impact comes. With hints of Sigur Ros, Death Cab For Cutie, Radiohead as well as classic rock like Pink Floyd and The Beatles, The Listening has nonetheless forged the band's own unique sonic identity. In the process, they have revealed one of the truly great albums of the past few years - melancholy, lush, captivating and passionate. There is a sense, with The Listening, of trespassing on sacred ground and being caught by the maker, and like the music, the only response is hushed awe. ~ Ryan Ro
The Listening (homepage)
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