Deafheaven
Sunbather


3.8
excellent

Review

by Xenophanes EMERITUS
May 29th, 2013 | 9209 replies


Release Date: 2013 | Tracklist

Review Summary: "I want to dream"

Somewhere between the decaying sounds of “Windows” and the sonic hell of “The Pecan Tree,” I began to not only embrace Sunbather-but completely believe in it. The transition lacks subtlety; one of dark foreboding that leads into harsh eruption of shrill screeches and exploding percussion. Unexpected, but such is life, as Deafheaven so deftly describe throughout the album’s 60-minute runtime. Conceptually, it encompasses the jovial, yet painful and ultimately fruitless search for perfection; a personal journey for beauty and grace mired by the pangs of failure and disappointment. Lofty subject matter for sure, but Deafheaven have crafted their latest work in such a way to completely invest the listener as each moment of struggle and sadness becomes completely lucid and believable.

Deafheaven handle their philosophy well through the lyrical content of Sunbather. However, it is the music itself that indeed carries the theme, being far more verbose than any lyrics could ever be. Even when dealing with life’s maladies, the duo finds places for profound beauty and warmth. While on its surface the album appears to be stumbling with various moods and emotions, one cannot help but feel that the internal struggle is absolutely intentional. To depict this, Deafheaven have embraced their post-rock influences completely, so much that “black metal” becomes a mere afterthought. Featuring the highs and lows endemic of the genre (lengthy compositions included) Sunbather seems somewhat orthodox-- sophomoric even. But the band avoids the potholes by breaking free from the established formula. The compositions are multifaceted, but do not rely on slow builds and grandiose finales. Instead, the unstructured songs feature subtle shifts that feel wholly natural. Raspy shrieks leading into uplifting piano bouts are par the course, yet never come across as contrived. Deafheaven have matured as songwriters, with Sunbather showing a sense of direction so fierce that it outclasses almost each one of their peers.

Sunbather truly is an album that needs to be experienced from start to finish—all or nothing, one might say. Such a sentiment has been said ad nauseum, but here it pertinent in enjoying the record to its full extent. As a unified work, the album can be appreciated for how well it all comes together as one package. Each moment is intentional within the grand scheme, like a minor piece to a larger whole. That is not to say that each piece cannot be admired separately. The lengthy and emotionally exhausting climax in “The Pecan Tree” is just as breathtaking as it would be coupled with the searing intro to the title track. Each song has its own identity and its own charm. “Dream House,” as an opener, is positively perfect. Beginning as one might expect, the track holds no punches with its aggressive and immediate delivery. It’s as if the band start things out this way to clear the air, proudly displaying their roots only to show us where they’ve ended up.

On that note, Roads to Judah was simply admirable. Deafheaven flexed some muscle and displayed a nice little amalgam of post-rock and black metal-lite. It was much more crass and rough around the edges, which in all honesty was part of its allurement. Where it lacked creativity, maturity, and poise, Sunbather more than makes up for with pinpoint precision and overwhelming focus. Deafheaven’s second outing is wondrous celebration of boundless ambition and pure artistic vision. Despite drawing a lot of attention for its disparaging influences, it is an album not bound by genre constrictions or musical convention. Rather, it is a work defined by its blinding intensity and enveloping beauty--like staring directly into the sun.



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user ratings (3444)
4
excellent
other reviews of this album
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Comments:Add a Comment 
PunchforPunch
May 29th 2013


7085 Comments

Album Rating: 3.0 | Sound Off

i hate this review

eternium
May 29th 2013


16358 Comments

Album Rating: 4.5

At least this isn't a 5 like I expected.

robertsona
Staff Reviewer
May 29th 2013


27371 Comments

Album Rating: 3.9

i hate the world

oltnabrick
May 29th 2013


40621 Comments

Album Rating: 3.5

i like the songs

Yuli
Emeritus
May 29th 2013


10767 Comments


Is this that Sun Bat Her band???

Gyromania
May 29th 2013


37005 Comments


hell yes eli!

sniper
May 29th 2013


19075 Comments


Where it lacked creativity, maturity, and poise, Sunbather more than makes up for.


"for" what?

TooLateToGoBack
May 29th 2013


2106 Comments

Album Rating: 5.0

100% yes.



title track is perfection.

Trebor.
Emeritus
May 29th 2013


59810 Comments

Album Rating: 3.5

IN DREAMS



THE SUN SETS IN OUR EYES

klap
Emeritus
May 29th 2013


12408 Comments


"here it is actually means something"

edit that shiz

sniper
May 29th 2013


19075 Comments


agreed

sniper
May 29th 2013


19075 Comments


no hate for an eli 4.7 i assure you

ShrillYell
May 29th 2013


269 Comments

Album Rating: 3.0 | Sound Off

Good review. This is definitely an improvement over Roads to Judah.

ProtossTheHero
May 29th 2013


167 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0

Album is so baller

oltnabrick
May 29th 2013


40621 Comments

Album Rating: 3.5

album is 🏀🏀🏀

zxlkho
May 29th 2013


3493 Comments

Album Rating: 5.0 | Sound Off

yeah so this rules

oltnabrick
May 29th 2013


40621 Comments

Album Rating: 3.5

oomf this year did

luci
May 29th 2013


12844 Comments

Album Rating: 5.0

best album

oltnabrick
May 29th 2013


40621 Comments

Album Rating: 3.5

haha really

Keyblade
May 29th 2013


30678 Comments

Album Rating: 3.5

false metal



getting old



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