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Jealous Gods

SKU: CG155603CD
Label:
Insomniac Music
Category:
Art Rock
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"There are some bands that when you look through their discography or their charting singles, you wonder why on God's green earth they became famous. Because even bucking the trends of the time, even without a catchy or interesting song or even good song to their name, there are acts that will somehow rise to the top of the charts. And then five years later people will look back on that time and wonder why the hell these guys became popular.

And then there's the opposite case. A musical act that for all intents and purposes should have been huge - maybe the trends were on their side, maybe they had infinitely catchy hooks, maybe they just made awesome music - and yet for no discernible reason, they never blew up in the mainstream the way they should. And we're going to be talking about one of those bands today, the Finnish alternative rock act Poets of the Fall. These guys released their first album Signs of Life in 2005 and ever since then have been releasing record after record of quality music that pretty much encapsulated everything I liked about alternative rock and metal. They had a great melodic focus and the instrumental heft to back it up, they wrote fantastic, hook-driven songs with introspective and emotionally compelling lyrics, and lead vocalist Marko Saaresto had one of the most compelling and expressive voices in the genre, a rich liquid baritone capable both of grit and melody.

So why didn't Poets of the Fall become huge in the US? Well, I've got a few ideas, the first being that the band opted for a more sophisticated and melodic presence when alt rock and metal of the time was going in the exact opposite direction. And with the decline of mainstream rock radio, I'm not surprised that Poets Of The Fall never blew up beyond their home country. The other thing - and this is coming from a fan of the band that thinks they've never really made a bad album - is that Poets Of The Fall didn't really make consistent albums. Their early output, especially their third album Revolution Roulette, was pretty uneven as the band worked to strike a balance between gorgeous melodic ballads and their more hard-edged material. 

But in 2012, the band seemed to finally hit that sweet spot with Temple of Thought, a strikingly potent release that fused their melodic focus with sweeping heaviness that made the album one of the best of the year. So you can bet I was hotly anticipating their newest record Jealous Gods - so how is it?

Honestly, I'm conflicted about this album. Let me stress that Jealous Gods is a great record, one that shows plenty of artistic innovation and yet still maintains the Poets Of The Fall sound that I really love. And yet this is a bit of a tough album to analyze, because we're looking at the band's lightest, breeziest, most mainstream-friendly record to date instrumentally - and paradoxically, their lyrics are just as cryptic and intricate as always, even though when decoded the subject matter doesn't appear all that weighty. In fact, I was almost convinced this was Poets Of The Fall's attempt at pop melodrama - and you know, they kind of nailed it and managed to sneak in subtle commentary on it along the way. In other words, I see a lot of direct parallels with Icon For Hire's self-titled record last year - and like that album, Jealous Gods is one of the best albums of the year - and I suspect for some long-time Poets of the Fall fans, one of the more controversial entries in their discography.

And the funny thing is that after the first few listens, you wouldn't think this album is that far removed from traditional Poets of the Fall, at least in terms of instrumentation and production. The electric guitar tones are clear with just enough reverb to shimmer across the mix, the acoustic instrumentation has plenty of texture, the rhythm guitar has rollicking crunch, and the keyboards lay a fantastic foundation for the melodic progressions. And yet from the first track 'Daze', the swirl of electronic effects become very audible, and it becomes apparent that Poets of the Fall are making one of the slickest albums of their career. And while I can see some metal fans calling this record 'poppy', I'm not against the shift - Poets of the Fall have always had a very clean, soaring, anthemic brand of production, and with Marko Saaresto sticking more with clean vocals on this album, it's a natural fit. It helps that the electronic elements are tastefully added and never feel tacked on, instead gentle support for the melodic progressions or the drums, which thankfully have not been replaced and still provide a lot of well-balanced presence on tracks like 'Rumors' and 'Love Will Come To You'. That being said, this is definitely Poets of the Fall's most acoustic leaning album to date, with the heavy strums opening 'Brighter Than The Sun', the indie folk leanings of 'Love Will Come To You', or the well-picked guitar balanced against the strings on 'Rebirth' or 'Nothing Stays The Same'. That's not saying there aren't more energetic heaviness: the sweeping power of 'Jealous Gods', 'Rumors', 'Hounds To Hamartia' or 'Clear Blue Sky' or the explosive guitar solo at the end of 'Nothing Stays The Same', or the rough-edged instrumental 'Rogue' which shows the band still has serious chops, even if this album doesn't deliver another 'Psychosis'.

But, of course, the song that fans will be most bitterly divided on is 'Choice Millionaire' - and it's easy to see why. The prevalence of shimmering synthesizers and echoing keyboards, even with the guitars coming in the back, it's a song designed to evoke swirling images of icy Europop - and on that standard, it's actually pretty good. Part of it is the slick production being so able to mimic that genre, but the larger factor is the sheer attitude that Marko brings to the vocals, the chorus and bridge all earnest power, but the verses crisp spoken word that's more reminiscent of Lady Gaga than anything else. And for what it is - all artifice and style and succumbing to empty thrills - it's pretty damn effective. If I were to take an issue with the song, it'd be for a more common issue with Poets of the Fall - Marko's falsetto. It's a divisive point amongst Poets of the Fall fans, and I'll go on record saying I don't like it as much as his mid-range, but it honestly doesn't bug me that much as his nasal cackle can, which is mostly absent on this album entirely. But his voice on this record is as clean and rich as ever, and is responsible for some of this record's most potent highs, the best being on the chorus of the title track which sends a chill down my spine every time.

But now let's get into lyrics and themes - and let's make this clear, Poets Of The Fall are the kind of songwriters I really like. Intricate lyrics loaded with classical references, rich dramatic imagery, and yet still show enough of a knack for a killer chorus and hook. But on this album, Poets of the Fall opted to be more oblique with their wordplay - the killer choruses are still there, but they don't seem to make a lot of sense or appear all that straightforward. And when you do start to decode the lyrics, they seem more than a little overwrought for the subject matter. A breakdown in trust in a relationship on the title track can be spanned by building bridges of rainbows, a new Bifrost to span the void. 'Rumors' describes the titular words like wildfire capable of death, 'Brighter Than The Sun' is used to describe the woman the narrator admires, 'Love Will Come To You' spares no expense in showing all the horrid torture the other person in the song might endure before love comes through, 'Rebirth' is positively biblical in describing what he'll do to hold onto love, and 'Hounds of Hamartia' evokes Greek tragedy. It's telling when the soaring whirlwind of 'Clear Blue Sky' is, lyrically, one of the more sober tracks on the album because the poetry everywhere else is hyperbolic in describing the feelings and it's all being sold with complete sincerity and it would be so easy to see it all as high camp because what are such weighty words doing on concepts that are really so pop...

And then you realize that's the point. 'Choice Millionaire' is the first salvo, a straight-up Europop song all about surrendering to that empty glamour because, to quote, 'Nobody needs more confessions'. And the sarcasm bleeding from Marko's voice says it all - all that hyperbole around trifling subject matter can feel empty. And the album ends on a dark note with 'Nothing Stays The Same', pointing at the people who see such hyperbole and exploit it for cheap thrills with no soul behind it and how it makes him sick knowing that whenever 'sorrow calls my name / I know nothing stays the same'. It's a lyric showing he won't have peace - and yet throughout this album he still tries and pursues real earnest emotion because to him, that's real. It might feel over-the-top, but it's honest and that lends it a power nothing can break. And it shows that even subject matter that's decidedly pop can be elevated into something more with real conviction. Hell, even the straight-up nihilism of 'Choice Millionaire' has a certain seductive quality that most Europop wishes it could pull off - and the crazy thing is that the song and the band knows it has that power. And thus it makes a certain amount of sense that the band references Norse, Greek, and Biblical tragedy and titled the album Jealous Gods - not just because the band plays the songs with that level of sweep and intensity and pulls it off, but because when you break it down, it's all just human drama. And when displayed properly, it can earn that epic sweep of drama. 

In other words, this album could easily be seen as melodramatic or silly, but it brings a level of intensity, power, and a very human element to the conflicts that makes it work. It's an album that reminds me not just of Icon For Hire, but Strange Desire by Bleachers, another album I like more and more every time I listen to it because it manages to elevate human drama to epic scale and has the sincerity and intellectual heft to back it up. And Jealous Gods by Poets of the Fall is even better, a killer slice of some of the band's best work that manages to be thematically consistent and extraordinarily powerful. In other words, it's a 9/10 and the highest of my recommendations. Folks, go get this album - this really is something special." - Spectrum Pulse

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  • "Boston art-rock sextet acclaimed by the Wall Street Journal, Boston Globe, NPR, and BBC release fourth album of expansive songcraft.Bent Knee is unlike any band you’ve ever heard. Its borderless sound combines myriad influences from across the rock, pop, minimalist, and avant-garde spectrums into a seamless, thrilling whole. Its new album Land Animal—Bent Knee’s first for InsideOut/Sony—takes its sound to a new level. It offers a suite of songs full of addictive hooks, lush melodies and enthralling twists and turns that capture the reality of life in the 21st Century—a reality of people and nations in the midst of tumultuous change. It also communicates a ray of hope and desire for listeners to embrace the fact that they’re not alone in their struggles.“The silo-smashing Bent Knee’s unique mix is equal parts ingenuity and deliciousness,” said Jim Fusilli of the Wall Street Journal in 2016 when he first heard the group. “Bent Knee breaks new stylistic and temperamental ground,” declared Steve Smith of The Boston Globe. Other media outlets worldwide have reacted with similar enthusiasm, including NPR and the BBC, which have featured the band.Bent Knee formed in 2009 as a democratic collective determined to push the boundaries of pop and rock. Lead singer and keyboardist Courtney Swain’s soaring vocals are instantly arresting. Guitarist Ben Levin is one of the most dynamic and versatile guitarists around, shifting between the raging and raucous to the sublime and meditative. Bassist Jessica Kion and drummer Gavin Wallace-Ailsworth combine into an enthralling rhythm section that’s equal parts powerhouse and nuance. Violinist Chris Baum’s kinetic violin work provides drama, grace and intrigue. World-class producer and live sound designer Vince Welch weaves it all together with a captivating, expert touch.The band has gone from strength to strength in recent years. Its last two albums, 2016’s Say So and 2014’s Shiny Eyed Babies, were hailed as significant art-rock achievements. The group has performed hundreds of shows across the world to date. During the fall of 2016, the band played for ecstatic audiences as an opener for the U.S. leg of The Dillinger Escape Plan's farewell tour.With Land Animal, Bent Knee has elevated its storytelling ambitions to create narratives that reflect and refract the currents we’re exposed to in the news every day.“We’re at this bizarre point in history when our species can almost actively play God,” explained Baum, when discussing the themes running through the album. “We’re getting closer and closer through communication and technology. On the flip side, we still have many primal urges that have yet to evolve. There’s a strange balance between our technology and our biology that’s tremendously difficult to find. Land Animal explores where those animalistic urges come from and how we can harness and transform them to create a better reality.”“The album has all kinds of songs about struggle,” added Levin. “We look at global warming, family strife, technology-mediated relationships, racism, and societal polarization. Each song is imbued with a dichotomy between who we are now as a species and where we’re going.”As the band hits the road in support of the album, it intends to explore the diversity of thought amongst its ever-growing audience in a world where it's increasingly easy to live inside one's echo chamber of ideologies.“I think our music is powerful and capable of uniting people with different perspectives,” said Kion. “They may think about things differently, but they’re there together, part of the concert. The fact that music and art can bring people together in that way is a really significant force that’s needed right now.”“We haven’t made a political album with Land Animal,” said Wallace-Ailsworth. “However, it’s definitely motivated by the difficult state of the world at the moment. If people are able to take some comfort in our music or create dialog through it, those are great things for us.”Like the band’s previous work, Land Animal is full of fresh, sophisticated arrangements and beautiful vocal harmonies, but it’s also its most direct statement to date.“It’s a really juicy and immediate album,” said Swain. “With our previous album Say So, I think it took people a few listens to absorb its themes. That’s not the case with Land Animal, which delivers more instant gratification.”“We tried to balance that with an appealing narrative arc,” said Welch. “The album starts with ‘Terror Bird,’ a song about individuals and communication issues and ends with ‘Boxes,’ a song that explores the fact that we’re all marching towards our own demise, so we better make the most of the time we have. Land Animal is an epic journey.”At the end of the day, the band believes strongly in music as a force for positive change and delivering ideas no other medium is capable of.“We believe music is the most efficient way to get a point across,” said Baum. “The only way to cut through the noise of a confused, globalized world is to create something that speaks directly to the soul, and that’s what we hope we’ve done with Land Animal.”"
    $19.00
  • "Boston art-rock sextet acclaimed by the Wall Street Journal, Boston Globe, NPR, and BBC release fourth album of expansive songcraft.Bent Knee is unlike any band you’ve ever heard. Its borderless sound combines myriad influences from across the rock, pop, minimalist, and avant-garde spectrums into a seamless, thrilling whole. Its new album Land Animal—Bent Knee’s first for InsideOut/Sony—takes its sound to a new level. It offers a suite of songs full of addictive hooks, lush melodies and enthralling twists and turns that capture the reality of life in the 21st Century—a reality of people and nations in the midst of tumultuous change. It also communicates a ray of hope and desire for listeners to embrace the fact that they’re not alone in their struggles.“The silo-smashing Bent Knee’s unique mix is equal parts ingenuity and deliciousness,” said Jim Fusilli of the Wall Street Journal in 2016 when he first heard the group. “Bent Knee breaks new stylistic and temperamental ground,” declared Steve Smith of The Boston Globe. Other media outlets worldwide have reacted with similar enthusiasm, including NPR and the BBC, which have featured the band.Bent Knee formed in 2009 as a democratic collective determined to push the boundaries of pop and rock. Lead singer and keyboardist Courtney Swain’s soaring vocals are instantly arresting. Guitarist Ben Levin is one of the most dynamic and versatile guitarists around, shifting between the raging and raucous to the sublime and meditative. Bassist Jessica Kion and drummer Gavin Wallace-Ailsworth combine into an enthralling rhythm section that’s equal parts powerhouse and nuance. Violinist Chris Baum’s kinetic violin work provides drama, grace and intrigue. World-class producer and live sound designer Vince Welch weaves it all together with a captivating, expert touch.The band has gone from strength to strength in recent years. Its last two albums, 2016’s Say So and 2014’s Shiny Eyed Babies, were hailed as significant art-rock achievements. The group has performed hundreds of shows across the world to date. During the fall of 2016, the band played for ecstatic audiences as an opener for the U.S. leg of The Dillinger Escape Plan's farewell tour.With Land Animal, Bent Knee has elevated its storytelling ambitions to create narratives that reflect and refract the currents we’re exposed to in the news every day.“We’re at this bizarre point in history when our species can almost actively play God,” explained Baum, when discussing the themes running through the album. “We’re getting closer and closer through communication and technology. On the flip side, we still have many primal urges that have yet to evolve. There’s a strange balance between our technology and our biology that’s tremendously difficult to find. Land Animal explores where those animalistic urges come from and how we can harness and transform them to create a better reality.”“The album has all kinds of songs about struggle,” added Levin. “We look at global warming, family strife, technology-mediated relationships, racism, and societal polarization. Each song is imbued with a dichotomy between who we are now as a species and where we’re going.”As the band hits the road in support of the album, it intends to explore the diversity of thought amongst its ever-growing audience in a world where it's increasingly easy to live inside one's echo chamber of ideologies.“I think our music is powerful and capable of uniting people with different perspectives,” said Kion. “They may think about things differently, but they’re there together, part of the concert. The fact that music and art can bring people together in that way is a really significant force that’s needed right now.”“We haven’t made a political album with Land Animal,” said Wallace-Ailsworth. “However, it’s definitely motivated by the difficult state of the world at the moment. If people are able to take some comfort in our music or create dialog through it, those are great things for us.”Like the band’s previous work, Land Animal is full of fresh, sophisticated arrangements and beautiful vocal harmonies, but it’s also its most direct statement to date.“It’s a really juicy and immediate album,” said Swain. “With our previous album Say So, I think it took people a few listens to absorb its themes. That’s not the case with Land Animal, which delivers more instant gratification.”“We tried to balance that with an appealing narrative arc,” said Welch. “The album starts with ‘Terror Bird,’ a song about individuals and communication issues and ends with ‘Boxes,’ a song that explores the fact that we’re all marching towards our own demise, so we better make the most of the time we have. Land Animal is an epic journey.”At the end of the day, the band believes strongly in music as a force for positive change and delivering ideas no other medium is capable of.“We believe music is the most efficient way to get a point across,” said Baum. “The only way to cut through the noise of a confused, globalized world is to create something that speaks directly to the soul, and that’s what we hope we’ve done with Land Animal.”"
    $9.00
  • Third collaboration from Steven Wilson and Aviv Geffen. Mr. Geffen wrote all of the material except for one track. Musically speaking its a very different animal than Porcupine Tree. Its much more laid back with a heavy emphasis on orchestration. I'm reminded a bit of later Pink Floyd and also Roger Water's solo works. Not a lot of pyrotechnics and really not much in the way of heaviness. Its almost as if Mr. Wilson has taken a supporting role as opposed to equal stature to Mr. Geffen. If you are looking for Porcupine Tree's quasi psychedelic metal look elsewhere. Blackfield presents you with (well recorded) art rock that targets your emotions rather than your thought process.
    $8.00
  • "Steven Wilson is allergic to expectation. The multitude of musical twists Hemel Hempstead’s favourite son’s career has taken have been matched in lockstep by eruptions of disgruntlement from fans taking umbrage at the fact he’s not made In Absentia for the 137th time.The fulmination levels shot off the scale when Wilson sprang Personal Shopperon an unsuspecting public as a taster for his sixth solo album. Here was a pulsing, strangely sexy 10-minute hymn to modern consumer culture that sounded like it had been manufactured in some chrome-walled electronics lab, while a passing Elton John reeled off a long list of lavish but unnecessary items that he’d probably bought off the internet that morning. Slave To The Algorithm, if you will.Those who hit ‘unlike’ on Wilson’s Facebook page halfway through the first listen probably made the right choice. The rest of The Future Bites mostly sticks to that same format: light on front-and-centre guitar, heavy on shapeshifting electronics, unexpected vocal interlocutions and a general sense that this is what the robots in Amazon warehouses listen to when the humans have all gone home. But anyone who does stick around will get to hear one of the boldest and best albums Wilson has ever made.The Future Bites isn’t a retro synthpop album, as its early detractors predicted. Quite the opposite: Personal Shopper and the glitchy gothtronica of standout track King Ghost exist half a beat in the future, predicting what’s just about to happen rather than casting a nostalgic eye back to the 80s.There’s a theme running through it – not a concept so much as a commentary on our rapacious appetite for stuff in a world where an unseen hand dictates our choices for us. That it was conceived by a man who has never met an expensive 12-disc box set he didn’t want to remix adds to the self-aware irony. If we’re going down, we’re going down shopping.Still, it’s not all driverless cars and The Internet Of Things. There’s humanity at the heart of The Future Bites. Eminent Sleaze is playful and knowing, its sawing strings and whooshing keyboards almost giving way to popping white boy funk, before it remembers who exactly is making it and pulls itself back from the edge. And a more recognisable Wilson emerges on 12 Things I Forgot, the closest he comes here to a traditional ‘rock’ song.The latter may be too little too late. The Future Bites undoubtedly marks a tipping point for Steven Wilson, and even more so for a segment of his fanbase. For some, there will be no coming back after this. That’s sad, because they’re missing out on something special." - Prog
    $6.00
  • "The Darkest Skies Are The Brightest’ is Anneke van Giersbergen’s 23rd career album. It was created in a time of personal crisis, with just an acoustic guitar and basic recording gear, in a small house near the woods just outside of Anneke’s hometown, and it grew into something much bigger. Lyrically, and musically, the award-winning Dutch artist lays her soul bare with the most evocative record of her career – captivating song-stories told with acoustic guitars, strings, horns, percussion, and Anneke's hypnotic vocal harmonies, combined with surprising departures into swampier, foot-stomping grooves."
    $15.00