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Peace Burial At Sea

Peace Burial at Sea: Peace Burial at Sea

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by Ben Yates

As the conventional post-rock formula starts to tire, audiences are increasingly looking for bands to bring fresh ideas to its table. No longer are the traditional loud-quiet soundscapes enough to satisfy and excite; or, at least, nothing that will equal Explosions In The Sky's The Earth Is Not A Cold Dead Place. That’s where bands like Peace Burial At Sea and 65daysofstatic come into the equation.

Peace Burial At The Sea’s eponymous follow-up to 2004’s dimly-received This Is Such A Quiet Town is a collection of songs crafted upon dark post-rock soundscapes, interspersed with blasts of post-hardcore and fused with gloomy electronics. My words can only make it sound like a pretentious, overtly self-indulgent piece of work, but trust me: Peace Burial At Sea is an exciting album.

Album opener ‘And The Driver Wears A Halo’ should be seen as the band’s statement of intent. By fusing sparse electronics with a chorus built around an impressive wall of noise and post-hardcore, they manage to elevate themselves above your average fledgling post-rock act. By the same noise, ‘Czarina Catherine’ and ‘B-Movie Karma’ stay on similar paths to said opener, but exploit their heavier urges with hopeless vocal wails and overbearing walls of guitar. Not that it’s a bad thing – if anything, Peace Burial At Sea need to explore that side of themselves a little more.

Some people have criticised the band for their obtrusively gloomy lyrics and themes. For me at least, it’s only as gloomy as you make it. What I get out of the record is a sense of excitement, exhilaration and rushes of blood when they build up their walls of noise into an incomprehensible racket. However, the record’s other half dabbles more in slow, sparse atmospheric electronics and immutable despondent themes which could – for some – take away from the record’s ‘edge’. Even if it’s not to some people’s tastes, the haunting vocal echoes and dark buzzes of electronics mark a progression in Peace Burial At Sea’s sound, and a new-found feeling of maturity in the way they make a post-rock record.

This album is a spirited comeback from Peace Burial At Sea, but moreover one of the undiscovered greats of its kind in 2006. Brilliant stuff.

  • Peace Burial at Sea 8 / 10

this...

is so much better than the first album and really deserves more than to be an undiscovered gem.

hopefully someone will pick up on this release and help the band get more exposure....


I want it !

Will ask my record shop to get it tommorow !


Ordering...

Hello, we don't actually have any distribution in place at the moment, so if you'd like to buy this here album, might i recommend you mosey across to www.peaceburialatsea.co.uk and use the shop there.
Thanks
John


Except...

If you live in Newcastle, where all the usual independent record shops have it.


I had the first album

Don't know where it came from but it was ok. The review has resparked my interests.


I got my copy of the first album...

...from Vinyl Exchange in Manchester.

The card described them as a cross between The Verve and Converge.

After reading that I just HAD to investigate!