| The Flashbulb Soundtrack to a Vacant Life |
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 | Tracklist: Prelude 1:09
Kirlian Voyager 2:24
Steel For Pappa 1:16
Dirt Bikes And Street Vendors 1:55
Bodies In The House Next Door 1:17
Forbidden Tracks 3:15
Sunset Dept. 1:17
Someone 2:27
La Tristesse Durera Toujours 2:00
That Missing Week 3:52
Remember Tomorrow 3:14
The First Rain And You 2:38
Warm Hands In Cold Fog 2:43
Near The Woods 2:19
Sunshine 3:21
No Running Water 1:59
Leaving Georgia 2:04
Severed 2:06
Vicious Circle 2:23
Swollen Trees 2:28
Submerged Renewed 3:05
Hello Mr. Tree 2:05
I Believed In God 2:19
Pine Ridge, SD 1:05
That Final Week 2:25
Returning Flight Theme 1:56
Floating Through Time 1:48
Highway One 2:28
Hello, I'm Benn 2:01
Suspended In A Sunbeam 2:19
When The Sky Ends 2:59
| Ranking: #25 for 2008 | |
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On 89 Lists
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| Summary: The Flashbulb is giving away this album for free, meaning you really have no excuse if you haven’t heard this album yet. Soundtrack to a Vacant Life is essential for anyone who likes music. |
Hello listener…downloader…pirate…pseudo-criminal…
Benn Jordan knows how to get your attention. Both musically and professionally, Jordan (aka “The Flashbulb”) has demonstrated his deft skill at snatching our deteriorating attention spans by the balls and not releasing them until everything he wants you to hear has been said. And Mr. Jordan has a lot to say. I knew this before I discovered quite how pioneering Jordan’s attitude was towards music distribution and how pissed he was at the tyranny of industry, but that’s all kind of superfluous when it comes to the music. Take three minutes out of your day to start Soundtrack to a Vacant Life, and you’ll know why. Three minutes is how long it takes for the infantile piano lick in “Prelude” to evolve into the blazing incarnation that propels “Kirlian Voyager.” A mammoth of a song, “Kirlian Voyager” is a two and a half minute tour de force that blends the aforementioned piano theme with swirling power chords and driving percussion to engulf the listener completely in the world of Soundtrack to a Vacant Life. Consider your balls grabbed. Oh, and get comfortable too, because there are twenty-nine more tracks to go, and Jordan’s not letting up.
As the title so aptly suggests, Soundtrack to a Vacant Life is an immense collection of songs meant to tackle the broad spectrum of human emotion. This means thirty-one tracks of music that include styles such as power-chord-drenched hard rock, abrasive drill-n-bass, heart-breaking piano ballads, and Spanish guitar suites (and that’s only counting the first ten tracks). This should mean cohesion hell, and yet despite the musical schizophrenia, Soundtrack to a Vacant Life never once feels disjointed or choppy; on the contrary, in Vacant Life, Jordan has crafted one of the year’s most fluid records. Transitions in musical styles and emotional auras are virtually seamless throughout Vacant Life’s seventy-minute plus duration, which is quite a feat considering how drastic those transitions can be. In the blink of an eye, poppy techno can give way to melancholy piano can give way to a furious drum solo (as is the case of the “Someone”-“That Missing Week” stretch), yet there’s no feeling of strain. It’s natural. If Soundtrack to a Vacant Life is meant as an autobiography (Jordan suffers from bi-polar disorder), then The Flashbulb deserves credit for so artfully translating his life to music. Jordan brings the listener on an emotional rollercoaster, literally orchestrating the vacant life referred to in the album’s title. Even if it’s not autobiographical, Jordan’s expertise in composing for what feels like twenty different moods is the whole reason Soundtrack to a Vacant Life is such an important release in the first place.
Now, while The Flashbulb’s songs have enough weight to carry Soundtrack to a Vacant Life through it’s intimidating length, it’s Jordan’s attention to detail that truly makes the album so monumental. Jordan leaves no rock unturned when making his album. No song is purposeless, nor is any textual decision arbitrary. Take Vacant Life’s numerous piano ballads, for example. When considered separately, each one sounds more or less the same as all the others, yet this is precisely the point. The similar emotional responses they cause give the album a center, a foundation for which Jordan can always return to. For example, after the post rock euphoria of “That Final Week” and the childlike naivety of “Returning Flight Theme,” “Floating Through Time” realigns the record, serving as a reminder of where bottom is. Similarly, “Leaving Georgia” marks the album’s turning point, the proverbial coming of age moment for the record. This kind of careful construction makes Soundtrack to a Vacant Life such a pinnacle for Jordan. He’s created a record that even after numerous listens still packs surprises, which should keep any listener coming back for more.
This brings me to my final point on Soundtrack to a Vacant Life: its relevance. In an era of apathy and listlessness, Soundtrack to a Vacant Life provides, well, the soundtrack to our vacant lives. One can superimpose oneself into any song off the album; find the track that speaks to him/her most in his/her current state. Feeling frustrated? Turn on “Vicious Circle.” Small? “Suspended in a Sunbeam.” Soundtrack to a Vacant Life has something for everyone, which is its greatest strength. Now, I’d be remiss if I didn’t mention that Jordan is giving this album away for free, meaning that you really have no excuse if you haven’t heard this album yet. I mean, with songs for every mood that caters to every taste, what’s stopping you? Soundtrack to a Vacant Life is essential for anyone who likes music.
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| Recent reviews by this author | | | |
Album Rating: 4.5 | Sound Off
http://indiecorner.wordpress.com/2008/02/01/idm-artist-the-flashbulb-leaks-his-new-album-on-torrent-site/
Here's Jordan's message to his fans, it's a good read if you're into that. Review was crazy difficult to write. If I get inspired to write more, I might add more. enjoy
Digging: Animal Collective - Fall Be Kind | | | awesome!
| | | the band pic is from a tony hawk game
| | | Album Rating: 4.5 | Sound Off
idk what thats about
| | | me either
| | | Album Rating: 4.5
Yah album rules
| | | hey I like music
is this essential for me?
| | | Album Rating: 4.5 | Sound Off
read the review, twat
jk ilu babeThis Message Edited On 08.05.08
| | | I read that little article, and it was pretty cool to see his perspective I guess.
I'm gonna hopefully fit this album in before I head to sleep.
Digging: The National - Boxer
| | | Album Rating: 4.5
my #1 for the year so far
Digging: Bill Callahan - Sometimes I Wish We Were an Eagle | | | Album Rating: 5
'bout god damn time someone reviewed this, good review.
| | | This is a good album.
| | | Album Rating: 4
this may be my #1 as well. just too good
| | | Album Rating: 3
I think this album starts amazingly and then really fizzles out. I know it's the obvious criticism but it really is way too long.
Digging: Shpongle - Ineffable Mysteries From Shpongleland | | | Album Rating: 3.5
finally got this. piano/acoustic tracks are really good.
Digging: Los Campesinos! - We Are Beautiful, We Are Doomed | | | Album Rating: 4
i love the little excerpt from waking life in kirlian voyager. i wish it went in a different direction after the vocals finish instead of that like aggressive hard riffage.
floating through time is probably my favorite because i love the piano on this album
| | | Album Rating: 3.5
I sort of agree with Iai, like, it's good, but its really... disparate and not a very coherent album. And long to compound it all. Sometimes a mess of styles and influences works really well, but here i'm not so sure. Some of the ideas and individual songs are done really well though.
Digging: Gaza - He Is Never Coming Back | | | I hope you're wrong Iai because I'm 9 songs in and it's pretty impressive =(
| | | Album Rating: 3
It started to tire me out a little at about track 15 or something.
| | | Where do you download it for free?
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