...And You Will Know Us by the Trail of Dead
Festival Thyme


4.5
superb

Review

by Aaron USER (7 Reviews)
April 24th, 2009 | 8 replies


Release Date: 2008 | Tracklist

Review Summary: And You Will Know Us By The Return To Utter Brilliance

And You Will Know Us By The Trail of Dead are a band that polarise listeners with each subsequent release, and Festival Thyme is no exception. Each of their releases is a progression from its predecessors, with the band never settling on a concept beyond the length of said release, possibly as a result of their dynamic and seemly ever changing line-up. I say polarising as a commonly held opinion seems to be that ...Trail of Dead had their swansong at Source Tags & Codes. Although the subsequent releases to ST&Cs, Worlds Apart and So Divided [and the oft overlooked gem Secret of Elena's Tomb EP] were individually fine works with some superb moments of musical genii, happily it is the Festival Thyme EP that solidifies my long-held opinion that ...Trail of Dead are not yet dead.

A natural progression from 2006' So Divided and 2004's Worlds Apart, Festival Thyme continues ...Trail of Dead's transformation from the Gen-Y Sonic Youth into a glorious amalgamation of indie-pop, post-rock and Beatleseque orchestrations. Production on Festival Thyme is lush across all four tracks, with each facet of the mix coming out clearly and balanced. Brian Eno would be proud of the use of studio as an instrument. I bothered to make mention of the mix as ...Trail of Dead have moments of intense complexity and juxtaposed sounds, and with a sub-par mix the brilliance of these components would be lost to the listener, even sounding jarring; The Betrayal of Roger Casement being a perfect example.

Festival Thyme keeps a simple structure in its track ordering, with its more accessible rock-oriented pieces Bells of Creation and Inland Sea preceding the calandonian-waltz feel of Festival Thyme and the aural-saturation of The Betrayal of Roger Casement. Don't take my observations about Bells of Creation and Inland Sea as them being generic, far from it in fact. Bells of Creation plays out like a sequel to Worlds Apart's Caterwaul, pounding and anthemic; letting drums and guitar remind the listener of ...Trail of Dead's live-shows/instrument-deconstruction-events. Inland Sea is a complimentary follower to Bells of Creation with its piano sweeps and arpeggios meshing sublimely with the soaring guitar tone in the choruses. Festival Thyme is a bit of a step to the left. When the last piano notes in track-two resolve we're met with a bassline introduction which can only be described as funky. Festival Thyme has a lilting 6/8 feel and a sound which reminds this listener of Crowded House circa-Recurring Dream. Building up with slow and careful placement of additional instruments gradually, Festival Thyme ends sooner than expected, leaving the listener with a mixture of disappointment and anticipation to where the EP will travel next down the trail.

Hyperbole is understood by this reviewer when this statement is made; The Betrayal of Roger Casement and the Irish Brigade is almost certainly the best track ...Trail of Dead have released to date. Production style is slightly different to the former three tracks with the inclusion of synthesizer and programmed percussion adding a new dimension to ...Trail of Dead's sound. On 2003's The Secret of Elena's Tomb EP ...Trail of Dead first toyed with electronica on the closer Intelligence. Whether it's intention for the subsequent EP, Festival Thyme, to also include a final track that uses these sounds is undetermined, what is determined however is that it works a treat. A short hit of sonorous feedback commences the track and slowly the different instruments are introduced with an ominous meandering feel. As each instrument is introduced and intensity built a strange irony occurs where, as with their earlier releases, again parallels can be drawn to Sonic Youth, Pavement et al from the early grungeadelica era. Halfway through the track rhythm is introduced with a bombastic drums for number of measures, which implodes into a segue of synth, programmed percussion and deep within the mix, indistinguishable vocal samples. Following a reprieve in the bridge again we meet drums, this time overlaying the percussive samples of earlier [perhaps as a nod to ...Trail of Dead's double-drumming live], and the subsequent zenith of the track.



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user ratings (23)
3
good

Comments:Add a Comment 
Kiran
Emeritus
April 24th 2009


6133 Comments


awesome review. I could never get into this band, unfortunately, as I sense I'm missing something.

Athom
Emeritus
April 24th 2009


17244 Comments


great review although i never really liked any of Trail of the Dead's albums after World's Apart.

Willie
Moderator
April 24th 2009


20212 Comments


I've heard "World's Apart" and didn't enjoy it.

Aaron
April 25th 2009


685 Comments


This is my first review beyond two sound-offs, so feedback is appreciated.

This EP really is a stand-out and reminded me why I lost my mind when I first discovered ...Trail of Dead. Can't wait to see them in May.

rasputin
April 25th 2009


14967 Comments


Great review.

One sentence that bothered me however, was this one:

Each of their releases is a progression from its predecessor,

I think either 'each release is a progression from its predecessor' or 'each of their releases is a progression from their predecessors', or something similar, would work better. You seem to be mixing plurality, or whatever the grammatical term for it is.

AggravatedYeti
April 25th 2009


7683 Comments


good review, tho I found this EP to be underwhelming.

Apostle7
April 25th 2009


235 Comments


There is nothing wrong with "...each of their releases is a progression from its predecessor." And Rasputin being a "Contributing Reviewer" should know grammar enough to know this.This Message Edited On 05.03.09

Aaron
June 16th 2009


685 Comments


I saw ...trail of dead live a few fridays back and they played all four tracks off this live. Must say they translated really well to the stage and sounded huge. I think live is where this band will always be on their game, it was amazing.



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