Tuesday, April 7, 2020

A Silver Mt. Zion: He Has Left Us Alone But Shafts Of Light Sometimes Grace The Corner Of Our Rooms...

A SILVER MT. ZION: HE HAS LEFT US ALONE BUT SHAFTS OF LIGHT SOMETIMES GRACE THE CORNER OF OUR ROOMS... (2000)

1) Broken Chords Can Sing A Little; 2) Sit In The Middle Of Three Galloping Dogs; 3)  Stumble Then Rise On Some Awkward Morning; 4) Movie (Never Made); 5) 13 Angels Standing Guard ʼround The Side Of Your Bed; 6) Long March Rocket Or Doomed Airliner; 7) Blown-Out Joy From Heavenʼs Mercied Hole; 8) For Wanda.

General verdict: GY!BE-lite for those who cannot or will not emotionally afford a symphony of a thousand — actually, a pretty viable alternative.

Not everybody knows that in between themselves and their various friends and relations, GY!BE have had approximately fifteen billion musical side projects going on over the past twenty years, in all sorts of imaginable and unimaginable configurations. Many of these projects existed solely for the purposes of being able to put out records with titles even longer than those of the regular GY!BE, but some actually had agendas of their own, and it would be irresponsible to just brush all this stuff off without listening. However, seeking them out one by one, and diligently reviewing all of them would take an extra lifetime, so I am going to focus on just a few which were arguably more important than others — those involving the bandʼs founding fathers and representing significant artistic variations while still preserving the base musical philosophy of GY!BE itself. And those which at least have Wikipedia pages of their own or something like that, because I donʼt really take pride in digging deeper than everybody else.

The first, and arguably the most important, of these side projects was A Silver Mt. Zion, later to be known as The (or Thee) Silver Mt. Zion Memorial Orchestra (plus or minus Tra-La-La Band), since it was led personally by Efrim Menuck, and the first lineup of this new band consisted of Menuck, GY!BE bassist Thierry Amar, and GY!BE violinist Sophie Trudeau, with just a few additional musicians on a handful of tracks. Menuck founded the band so he could test out ideas that would allegedly be unsuitable for the GY!BE format — essentially, I believe, he wanted to spend some time working in a more minimalistic, chamber-like environment, without all the monumentality of proverbial GY!BE crescendos.

At the same time, even the title of Silver Mt. Zionʼs first album is sufficient to understand that the basic vibe of this music would remain relatively unchanged. If anything, it is even closer to GY!BEʼs early beginnings (ʽThe Dead Flag Bluesʼ, etc.) than Lift Your Skinny Fists — more of that quietly mournful post-apocalyptic music frozen in a no-longer-inhabited world of dust and ashes, rather than the epic create-and-destroy-and-create-again musical waves of GY!BE at their orchestral peak. The pompousness of the albumʼs title is ever so slightly deflated upon learning that the record was dedicated by Menuck to the memory of his dog, recently deceased from cancer, but only very slightly — after all, Dog is God, isnʼt it? In addition, Menuck has stated that the record was supposed to have a specifically Judaistic feel, which, I think, stems more from the overall by-the-rivers-of-Babylon mournful vibe rather than from specific music elements, but then I am not the best connoisseur of Jewish religious music in the world, and I can only swear by my intuition that the music here is far more reminiscent of Góreckiʼs Third than any Jewish laments Iʼve ever heard. Not that it really matters.

The record itself is pretty good, though not quite the devastating tragic masterpiece as initially suggested by its musical themes. Menuck himself does not play that much guitar on it; instead, he embraces the piano, and most of the tracks are essentially a dialog between his modernistic / minimalistic piano playing and Sophie Trudeauʼs equally minimalistic violin lamentations, sometimes joined by Amarʼs sparse, jazzy bass plucking. Only one track feels like a slightly alleviated take on the classic GY!BE vibe — ʽSit In The Middle Of Three Galloping Dogsʼ, with Aidan Girt providing drum reinforcements, is the closest they come here to an actual GY!BE crescendo, though most of the crescendo effects are only provided by Girt himself and by Sophieʼs complex violin overdubs.

Judging the quality of the individual tracks is hard, and perhaps should be a better job for those with a heavy interest in contemporary classical music; my vague opinion is that the Menuck-Trudeau collaboration is competent and generates genuine serious atmosphere, but most of the tracks end up rather interchangeable, and the entire album works great as a mood-setter on a gray and depressing morning, with endless slow rain turning the ground to mush in front of your window, but not so great as a collection of individually memorable tracks with outstanding musical themes. At the very least, something like that see-sawing violin rhythm rocking the boat on ʽSit In The Middleʼ is more like a sad lullaby than a mind-blower of ʽStormʼ or ʽSleepʼ caliber, if you know what I mean.

Two quite unusual tracks, however, are sandwiched in the middle. ʽMovie (Never Made)ʼ is a rare example of a lyrical rant, delivered by Menuck to a quiet piano and bass musical background (no violin this time, or it would have drowned out his message) — itʼs not every day that you get to hear the guy singing, and maybe it is a good thing, because he sounds just like a generically over-emotive indie kid, but it is still interesting to hear him deliver his cryptic lyrics which go from Jewish references (dancing the horah on Mount Zion) to creepy visions of revolutionary violence ("letʼs televise and broadcast the raping of kings").

Essentially it still functions as merely a verbal introduction to the albumʼs centerpiece, ʽ13 Angels Standing Guard ʼRound The Side Of Your Bedʼ — regardless of whether you like or hate it, it is most certainly the one track here that you will not soon forget. Built around a rhythm track of treated vocal samples, it builds up in intensity with the gradual addition of Trudeauʼs violin overdubs, but the main focus is always on those wispy sighs and moans, with a «lead vocal» that rises in pitch from «angelese» to «chipmunkese» and, depending on your perspective, will come across as either ultra-heavenly or thoroughly ridiculous, the best thing about it being that you can shift your perspective any time, like in an optical illusion. I guess we could technically define the compositionʼs genre as «New Age», but with particularly strong emphasis on «New», because it will wreak havoc on your eardrums rather than placate them like a well-behaved New Age track by the likes of Enya typically should.

The rest of the album is nowhere near as experimental, because, as I have already said, most of these tricks you have already experienced on early GY!BE records. Still, I am a big admirer of Sophie Trudeauʼs violin work on the whole, and the record went down really easy on me — I certainly get the point of segregating a «mini-GY!BE vibe» from the pack, and I also appreciate that they settled for a relatively brief running time (a more minimalistic approach, after all, does require a more minimalistic presence in the spacetime continuum as well) — 47 minutes is just the right time to spare on a solitary cosmic lament about the end of the world as we know it. 

2 comments:

  1. "those with a heavy interest in contemporary classical music"
    I do have interest in contemporary classical music, but don't know if I can call it "heavy". Still I'll give it a try. Broken chords has a promising start. It's purely tonal and thus not that contemporary. Ustvolskaja this is not. Not even Roslavets, who had his (atonal) peak about 100 years ago.
    It might take a while before I have finished the record, but I promise to comment extensively. This opener has sparked my interest, so thanks.

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  2. The opening track Broken Chords managed to hook me up, but I could perfectly have done without the overlong preaching at the end. When I listen to music words are not my main interest. This is one reason btw I think Bob Dylan a bore.

    "Only one track feels like a slightly alleviated take on the classic GY!BE vibe"
    Then I'd better bit listen to classic GYIBE, because I think Three Galloping Dogs a total bore. I'm totally OK with minimalism; in some of Shostakovich' slow symphony movements there doesn't happen much either. But this is nothing but endless repetition.
    Stumble and Rise works much better. In my ears minimalism works best if it serves to draw my attention to and thus to enlarge the importance of the small changes that are there. In the ideal case That's what happens here. The music even speeds up at the end. In fact, given "most of the crescendo effects" I wonder if you have mixed up these two songs. Anyhow, after Three Galloping Dogs I needed a couple of days to find enough courage to go on with this record. Stumble and Rise has encouraged me.

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