Gang of Youths
Go Farther in Lightness


5.0
classic

Review

by BigHans USER (118 Reviews)
August 18th, 2017 | 102 replies


Release Date: 2017 | Tracklist

Review Summary: Soaring rock anthems and moments of tender self-realization that will stop you in your tracks.

This Goddamn record. This heroic, string-laden, driving guitar saturated, self-aware, atmospheric clinic of heart-on-your-sleeve ROCK, this is it. The final 2 minutes are a furious crescendo of call-to arm drums, the kind of inspired piano you see when the artist kicks back his stool to show he means serious Goddamn business, climbing guitars that would make The Edge cream himself in mega-reverb ecstasy, lyrics ripped from the monologues of poetic inspirational speakers, and an atmosphere that someone just figured his sh*t out and has achieved the level of self-realization that only comes on the wings of the hardest redemption. This is “Say Yes to Life,” and it perfectly encapsulates this opera, this masterpiece, this 77-minute self-help mantra set to a monstrously delicious co-mingling of soaring rock anthems and moments of tender self-realization that will stop you in your tracks. Welcome to the modern epic rock album, the way it should be done.

“If I could reach out of the screen and give you something to believe in, I would.” A fitting lamentation, and visceral, grandiose displays are how future Aussie rock God David Le’aupepe and company do things. Previous effort “Positions” was a 70-minute treatise on cancer and its soul-crushing devastation. “Go Farther in Lightness” is more than a quintessential statement of optimism, it’s a glaringly beautiful canvas devoted to setting the heart on fire. It has the impact and the necessary sincerity immediately identifiable and impossible to fake. The first 2 minutes begin with a gentle piano/vocal hook that recalls night walking, early Tom Waits, and what Bruce Springsteen would sound like if Australia was somehow supplanted into the carnival shores of Jersey. “Fear and Trembling”, this magnificent anthem bursting with poetic tropes of self-lamentation, explodes into an ascending, pretentious-in-the-right-way rock clinic that the Killers have been unsuccessfully trying to write for 14 years. “You’ll feel it in your bones. You’ll feel it in your heart. You’ll feel it in your f*cking skull.” Its that kind of song, the one that feels existential by talking about being existential. It’s just Goddamn glorious.

Speaking of the Killers, the punch of “What Can I Do If the Fire Goes Out” and “Atlas Drowned” are the kind of cathartic, indie rock fist-raisers that Brandon Flowers was going for on “Sam’s Town” but wasn’t smart enough to rip off Bruce Springsteen’s brand of Americana correctly, and the War on Drugs and Gaslight Anthem didn’t exist yet. “Atlas Drowned” has that moment when everything stops. Then the guitars come in. Then Le’aupepe laments about the “heart of redemption” over surging power chords, the drums of war, and scrapes the range of his vocal chords alongside an absolutely trenchant melodic display. As for The National, “Keep Me in the Open” is seriously going to piss Matt Berninger off. The baritone, the gorgeous piano/vocal tradeoff, the gentle, marching band drum step, and the lyrics about girls and “heart in the gutter” types sleeping on stranger’s knees; every National trope is on full display. Like his very heart and soul, Le’aupepe wears his influences on his sleeve, and while clearly identifiable, it’s clear he chooses the right ones.

“Go Farther in Lightness” is designed for greatness. It’s cataclysmically huge, and it’s clear that it absolutely is supposed to be. String sections abound, quiet/loud atmospherics create a titanic feeling, and violin interludes prescribe the delicious intermissions found on the greatest rock operas. All of these tricks are deployed well, but in the end, it wouldn’t matter if the music wasn’t executed well. On a record of jaw-dropping moments, the apex is found on “The Deepest Sighs, The Frankest Shadows,” absolutely one of the best rock songs of the decade. The video is exclusively about Le’aupepe fervently sprinting towards something, chasing the unsayable, achieving the unbearable, and it’s the perfect accompaniment for a song that relies on metaphor laden atmospherics while exploding into primal beauty. This song, this Goddamn gorgeous execution of soul fire, this is it.

It requires skill to envelop subject matter that could potentially be labeled trite and make it just explode with unbridled sincerity. It's an existential record that talks about being existential. The songs about the fire dying, saying yes to life, knowing your time is short, it’s clear an embroiling life crisis has just been overcome. This kind of thing has been done before, to varying degrees of success. If the result of walking out of the fire of crisis sounds like this, then damn it, I want to experience one, for nothing else than to heroically emerge from it. If the heart of redemption is through a song, this is the appropriate example, the rock album of the year, and one of the most impactful to emerge in some time.



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user ratings (496)
4.1
excellent
other reviews of this album
Knott- EMERITUS (5)
Let your life grow strong and sweet to the taste, 'cause the odds are completely insane....

Rowan5215 STAFF (4.5)
a symphony of heartstrings...

Sowing STAFF (5)
Say yes to life!...

harro1919 (5)
A Personal Review on a couple of songs from "Go Farther in Lightness"...



Comments:Add a Comment 
BigHans
August 18th 2017


30959 Comments

Album Rating: 5.0 | Sound Off

Its been awhile. This was good enough to bring me out of retirement.

Slex
August 18th 2017


16519 Comments


On the 4th track of my current listen, Atlas Drowned was absolutely tremendous
Always thought these guys were solid but didn't quite get the hype, hoping this album changes that

BigHans
August 18th 2017


30959 Comments

Album Rating: 5.0 | Sound Off

The 4th track might have you thinking you're listening ot the National

BigHans
August 18th 2017


30959 Comments

Album Rating: 5.0 | Sound Off

And yeah, Atlast Drowned absolutely slays

Slex
August 18th 2017


16519 Comments


Well The National are a top 3 favorite band of mine so that's good lol
Review is great too, pos'd

glorybox94
August 18th 2017


1079 Comments

Album Rating: 4.5 | Sound Off

Atlas is track of the year

BigHans
August 18th 2017


30959 Comments

Album Rating: 5.0 | Sound Off

Thanks Freddie.



Glory, its up there. Top 5 for sure. Song destroys. First 4 tracks are completely flawless

theBoneyKing
August 18th 2017


24386 Comments


Goddamn

dbizzles
August 18th 2017


15193 Comments

Album Rating: 4.5 | Sound Off

Nice review. Album is the tiddies.

DaveyBoy
Emeritus
August 18th 2017


22500 Comments


Long time, no review Hans... You might be "as American as fcuk", but we might just have to make you an honourary Aussie for a while! 1st lesson: Note the 'u' in honourary.

Great review mate. I've only heard the 4 singles thus far, with 2 of them being absolutely outstanding (Atlas & Deepest Sighs). The other 2 are great as well. Actually, it might be worth linking the YT vids for those 2 (or 4) in your 1st comment for the uninitiated.


hogan900
August 18th 2017


3313 Comments

Album Rating: 5.0 | Sound Off

Will debate 5'ing over next few days, love every song

hogan900
August 18th 2017


3313 Comments

Album Rating: 5.0 | Sound Off

Awesome review too man, way to do it justice

Slex
August 18th 2017


16519 Comments


So yeah, this is fucking incredible

Inveigh
August 19th 2017


26875 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0

Great review man, you were absolutely right about tjese guys / this album. Some of the best rock I've heard in write a while.

verdant
Emeritus
August 19th 2017


2492 Comments

Album Rating: 4.5 | Sound Off

hell yes hans! what a stunning stunning stunning album, and a review worthy of it, too! ")

random
August 19th 2017


3148 Comments


Your review rules.

grandfather
August 19th 2017


218 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0

Glad someone else did a 5 review so I don't have to. The lyrics are a little cringey from time to time, and the National moments are very obvious, but fuck I'm so glad I discovered these guys and I hope this turns more people on to them

Lefondre
August 19th 2017


179 Comments

Album Rating: 5.0

I loved their debut so I am very keen to hear this.

tcat84
August 19th 2017


1339 Comments


I see the early rating and am intrigued
I look at comparable bands and don't really love 59' sound or Smith Street Band
Play the first track and realize this sounds a fucking lot like Bruce Springsteen who I'm not really a huge fan of other than a few classics...
Saw that it had 16 songs!?!
I think to myself "self, you're not gonna like this all that much"

By the middle of Atlas Drowned I was hooked and it didn't even feel long I'm glad I gave this a shot


Scoot
August 20th 2017


22191 Comments

Album Rating: 4.5

this is very good



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