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solarminds review on Audioversity.com by PMMasterson
Jan. 17, 2008
Though they're from a city known more for Drive Like Jehu and Swing
Kids, San Diego's Solarminds speak to a past much further back than
even cursory listens which suggest The Brian Jonestown Massacre or
Swans or Spiritualized (or even Joy Division and Massive Attack, whom
they were lodged between for their radio debut on
Local 94.9 FM) at their mind-bending best. Solarminds are fundamentally ancient. This is ancient music.
There
are the obvious milemarkers for such an observation. Not to say that
religion is outmoded, but the titles alone suggest something steeped in
reverence with words like salvation, prayers, worshiping and so on. The
mood has been established before you ever press play merely through
their choice of song titles.
For its part, the music goes a long
way toward building an epic Gregorian chant kind of ambiance. "My
Salvation (Drifting)" starts off innocently enough with what is either
windchimes or bells ringing in a remarkable album in the most
unremarkable of ways. Clearly, patience pays and Solarminds are in no
mood to rush. Taking cues from their aforementioned influences, the
band's willingness to use standard instruments like heavily-effected
guitars alongside a less standard instrument such as the harp allows
them a great deal of freedom to roam throughout your headphones.
They
don't make the listening easy. "My Salvation (A Way)" - one of six
variations on the "My Salvation" theme - stretches some nine minutes
long... And though its propulsion allows it to feel like significantly
less time, the band's careful conglomeration of sounds and unifying
themes means that the whole first half of the album really functions
more as one hyper-extended jam than as individual tracks. But what a
jam it is. You'll have to hit the MySpace to hear the whole thing in
its opulent entirety.
The vocals also evoke a Gregorian air in
another, more basic way: The treatment of the vocals. Single syllables
are stretched out in a grand melisma that would've impressed Gregory
the Great himself. The pitch of the notes fluctuates wildly and it is
clear that the lyrics play more as instrument than narrative. Voices
are used sparingly and find themselves as texture more than talent
(Instrumentals such as "Then Came the Night" and more airy spaces
continue to dominate the second half of the album). This restraint has
allowed a more unified album, a better togetherness.
Yank Crime it ain't.
At its most base description,
A Lighthouse for the Sun
is a band in love with space-rock and shoegaze and post-rock and maybe
a little noise-pop. But it's also none of those things. It's a record
steeped in a history dating back hundreds of years and modernized to be
put in terms of what the average music listener knows rather than what
musicology students study. If
Urck had a name for this album, perhaps it would've been this:
Post-Religious Dream Music. Dare to dream, indeed.
Get Wiggy with This
By
Ollie | Published Wednesday, Jan. 16, 2008
Album: A Lighthouse for the Sun (2007)
Artist: Solarminds
Label: Mind Altering Records
Where available/price: Lou’s Records in Encinitas ($10.99), Cow
Records in Ocean Beach ($8.98), Mojo Sounds/Thrift Trader ($8.99),
Taang! Records ($9.99), M-Theory in Mission Hills ($9.99), Thirsty Moon
($9.99), Off the Record in North Park ($11.99), and Spin Records
($11.99). Online at mindalteringrecords.com for $12.
Songs: 1) My Salvation (Drifting) 2) My Salvation (a Way) 3) My
Salvation (Saved) 4) My Salvation (with Sound) 5) My Salvation (and
Prayers) 6) The Worshiping Sun (Soul) 7) Then Came the Night 8) Vision
9) Hallucination 10) The Worshiping Sun (Mind) 11) The Dawn Will Always
Come
Band: Chris “Solarone” (guitars, keyboards, percussion, ambient
sounds, vocals), Starry Wizdom (keyboards, harp, vocals), Doug “Umbra”
(bass, vocals), Paul Gil (drums), Jaime Lyerly (vocals)
My first impression of this CD was “Great, just what I need: a Dark
Side of the Moon knockoff.” Solarminds’ pace is a slow, determined one,
and they incorporate an electronic filter or effect for every
instrument and vocal. All of them. The combination results in wiggy
atmospheric lounge music with haunting, far-off voices that seem to be
shouted up from the bottom of a well.
There are no clear delineations between songs; through slight
alterations in the beat or variations in the chords, a new song is
created from the foundation laid by the track before it. The lyrics are
heady and repetitive, associated with shadows, rain, the sun, and the
mind…as well as torture and life. It’s conceptual audio art, and it’s
not for everyone. By track four, I’m impressed. No instrument misses a
chord or beat. Even though it’s oddball stuff, it’s well played,
relaxing, and forces contemplation, which seems to be Solarminds’
intended goal.
While I would not want to sit in a bar while the band reverbed their
instruments and whined through megaphones, I wouldn’t mind having the
album lying around in case a buddy of mine scored some mushrooms and my
Netflix movies included the entire run of that goofball TV show from
the ’70s, Land of the Lost. Just for the weirdness of it.
solarminds radio interview with Tim Pyles on FM 94.9 Dec. 21, 2007
