A SILVER MT. ZION: BORN INTO TROUBLE AS THE SPARKS FLY UPWARD (2001)
1) Sisters! Brothers! Small Boats Of Fire Are
Falling From The Sky!; 2) This Gentle Hearts Like Shot Birdʼs Fallen; 3) Built Then Burnt [Hurrah! Hurrah!]; 4) Take
These Hands And Throw Them In The River; 5) Couldʼve Moved Mountains; 6) Tho
You Are Gone I Still Often Walk W/You; 7) CʼmonCOMEON (Loose An Endless
Longing); 8) The Triumph Of Our Tired Eyes.
General verdict: Seems like a fairly rushed, rightdown lazy job from the potentially awesome «chamber subset» of GY!BE.
It is harder for me to get into Silver Mt.
Zionʼs second album, and not least because they have decided to expand to a
six-piece band now (the album is formally credited to «The Silver Mt. Zion
Memorial Orchestra & Tra-La-La Band», though I must say that the Tra-La-La
Band is largely hiding behind the back of the Memorial Orchestra). Basically,
the more people are gathered around Menuck, the more it begins to resemble
standard GY!BE, while still lacking the energy and monumentality of the latter.
The most obvious case in point would be the penultimate track, ʽCʼmonCOMEONʼ,
an eight-minute crescendo that is totally in GY!Be style, but with very weak
drums and without an impressive main theme — I mean, this is obviously not the
kind of material for which youʼd have to start up a special side project.
The sub-formula that was elaborated on the bandʼs
debut album still works, from time to time, and some of the soundscapes are
impressive — nowhere more so than on the opening track, which might not be
particularly reminiscent of "small boats of fire falling from the
sky", but is still reminiscent of something. On top of the predictably
minimalist piano pattern and subtle neo-classical violin lines the band
overdubs a set of shrill, droning, bee-like string flourishes which add an odd
psychedelic flavour to the overall post-apocalyptic atmosphere. It goes on for
what might seem like an eternity, but length is no enemy for a well-developed
and sonically unusual ambient groove. Unfortunately, already the second track,
ʽThis Gentle Hearts...ʼ, shows that this is not going to be an exceptionless
principle — it sounds like a variation on some baroque flourish that could open
an 18th century opera, looped ad infinitum (well, for five minutes and
forty-five seconds, to be precise), and this is the sort of minimalism that I
could at best tolerate in an open-world video game, but not as a standalone
piece.
The third track, ʽBuilt Then Burnʼ, is melodically
almost indistinguishable from the first one — its only difference is a lengthy
spoken intro, delivered by a kid in the most awkwardly melodramatic fashion
possible, spouting forth neo-Biblical quasi-apocalyptic nonsense that can at
best amuse, at worst seriously irritate (as opposed to, for instance, the
deeply moving Coney Island monolog at the beginning of ʽSleepʼ). Sadly, this
does not feel so much like a variation on GY!BE atmospherics as an amateurish
and uninspired attempt to mimic that atmospherics on a smaller scale, with just
about everything that could go wrong going wrong.
The fourth track introduces singing vocals —
and with Menuck taking a more active role in this endeavour than ever before,
it strikes me how much these Silver Mt. Zion vocal numbers feel like a failed
rehearsal for Arcade Fire: from the loud and martial ʽTake These Handsʼ all the
way to the closing choral lament ʽTriumph Of Our Tired Eyesʼ and its repetitive
slogan of "musicians are cowards, musicians are cowards!", it all
sounds half-baked and tentative. The vocals are there, but they are muddy and
concealed, as if the singer were ashamed of himself, and the accompanying
string parts are restrained and monotonous, as if passion were absolutely not a
requirement for these collective anthems. In fact, structurally ʽTriumph Of Our
Tired Eyesʼ could almost serve as a working model for Arcade Fireʼs ʽIn The Back
Seatʼ, but there is nothing even remotely close to the deep cathartic feeling
caused by the latter in the former.
Of course, if you tie down and gag your
expectations, and simply take this whole thing on the level of «soundtrack to a
lost movie», there is nothing particularly bad about it — the violins and
cellos are stately and pretty in all their neo-classical flair, Menuckʼs
plaintive voice is friendly and humble in all of its Canadian lonesomeness, and
the overall atmosphere does at least match the albumʼs title, taken directly from
the Book Of Job which is, expectedly,
GY!BEʼs favorite part of the Old Testament (and should be everybodyʼs, I guess).
But this is not right — all of these albums, side projects or not, are vastly
conceptual at heart, and strive, or should strive, at hitting oneʼs emotional
center... which is not that easy to do when you get this nasty intuitive feel
that the band is really sleepwalking through most of this material.
I will still highlight the opening track with
its bumblebee-flavored psychedelia as a relative success, but as for the rest, I
shall just have to assume that the band members were too busy thinking of the
upcoming GY!BE sessions to come up with some seriously thought-out material for
this project. Which is a pity, because, as I have mentioned in the previous review,
I think that the reduced chamber format of Silver Mt. Zion had plenty of
potential.
I can only agree this album is nothing special and seems like chamber music by the numbers. Whether the members were busier with GYBE ideas I'm not sure of: the following Yanqui UXO wasn't that great either.
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