Login Form






Lost Password?
No account yet? Register
Some sections of this Web require you to login. It will also get you some nice prizes. It's painless.

In the Photo Gallery

Home arrow play by play (music) arrow Ghost of the Russian Empire | The Mammoth (s/r)
Ghost of the Russian Empire | The Mammoth (s/r) Print E-mail
Written by Kevin Renick   
Wednesday, 07 May 2008
Digg!

cd_ghost-russian.jpgIt's got that sound—that staggering, powerful combination of primal R'n'R ingredients exemplifying the form at its most artfully transcendent.

 

 

 

 

 

 

On your knees, Plebeians! Kneel before the mighty power of the rock! Declare thy reverence for the grandeur of the electrified guitar, the rapture of perfectly recorded reverb, the commanding power of the kick drum! And, um, really moody vocals from this Texas dude named Brandon Whitten! Be thou humbled to encounter the sheer sonorous perfection of modern shoegazers Ghost of the Russian Empire, or their mammoth new full-length, uh, The Mammoth, shall not be unleashed before thine ears!

Seriously, though, this independent release by the Texas quartet fronted by Whitten is one hell of an album. It's got that sound -- that staggering, powerful combination of primal R'n'R ingredients exemplifying the form at its most artfully transcendent. Countless bands have been influenced by guitar-fuzz auteurs like My Bloody Valentine, but what puts Ghosts of the Russian Empire so far ahead of the pack? Maybe the decision to use wizardly producer Erik Wofford, who worked similar sonic magic for The Black Angels.

And it could be the molten churn of electric guitars heating up this platter, some of which were obviously played by Whitten, but Jason Pike and Ruben Anchondo (both credited on guitar/bass) also contributed. Then there's Whitten's haunted vocals, placed at a distance in the mix -- usually behind waves of reverb -- so you can't hear the lyrics very distinctly (although they're printed on the insert). But you can sure feel the emotions. There's something heavy in the air, these songs tell you, and it befits this band's unique moniker, which evokes the fall of something mighty and the disturbing residue left behind.

The disc offers a series of shadowy, unsettling musical portraits, and you don't need to decipher a single lyric to get utterly spooked and mesmerized at the same time. "Dark" is a gripping slow burner that features the sort of chord changes for which discerning ears are always grateful, while Whitten's keening voice hints at unspeakable tragedy. The mood continues with the incredible "Dresden," which sounds for all the world like Neil Young and Crazy Horse had Neil suddenly taken a coffee break and let Kevin Shields take over. Just listen to Mike Plata's Ralph Molina-like drumming, and the beautiful crunch of the guitars. A totally unexpected tempo change then elevates this track to genuine classic status.

"In the Borough of a Beast" is aptly named, with its piano and ominous beauty evoking a rapidly darkening sky. But "The Black Mark" might be the highlight of this remarkable platter. It begins with crisp acoustic guitar, then turns into an atmospheric tour de force that finds the band playing with incredible clarity of purpose, like they're lugging some hugely important object up a steep hill with the weight divided four ways, perfectly. The lead electric guitar cries out with transcendent beauty; it's some of the best axe work on any recent album.

And if you have a hankering for a nice, gloomy seven-minute dirge, you couldn't possibly do better than "The White Sea," a shiver-inducing journey through roiling sadness, Whitten's voice again amazing with its distant, anguished plaint. The track finds the band confidently surfing a wave of immersive ambient distortion near the end, leaving all competitors for this kinda sound behind. In short, The Mammoth is a killer album. In an age of pessimism and uncontrollable events, Ghost of the Russian Empire have made a soundtrack that's cathartic, illustrative and hypnotically beautiful. A | Kevin Renick

RIYL: Neil Young and Crazy Horse, My Bloody Valentine, Camper Van Beethoven





Reddit!Del.icio.us!Google!Facebook!Slashdot!Netscape!Technorati!StumbleUpon!Newsvine!Furl!Fark!Blogmarks!Yahoo!Ma.gnolia!Squidoo!BlogMemes!Free social bookmarking plugins and extensions for Joomla! websites!
Comments
Add NewSearch
Only registered users can write comments!

Related Items:
Sleep Station | The Pride of Chester James (Eyeball)
10,000 B.C. (Warner Bros., PG-13)
Akron/Family | Love Is Simple (Young God)
Ana Popovic | 06.17.08
Ana Popovic | 09.23.07
Annie: Anniemal (Big Beat)
Australia (20th Century Fox; PG-13)
Biirdie | Catherine Avenue (Love Minus Zero)
Black Fortress of Opium | s/t (s/r)
Black Tie | Goodbye, Farewell (Socyermom)
Bodies of Water | A Certain Feeling (Secretly Canadian)
Body of Lies (Warner Bros., R)
Chuck Berry | 08.13.2008
Club 8 | The Boy Who Couldn't Stop Dreaming (Labrador)
Dark Dark Dark | The Snow Magic (Blood Onion)
Definitely, Maybe (Universal Pictures, PG-13)
Dive Index | Mid/Air (Neutral Music)
Doctors & Dealers | Confessions of a Drunken Mind (Bluesong)
Everthus the Deadbeats | A Dazzling New Band Delivers a Musical Diamond
Get Smart (Warner Bros., PG-13)
Ghosts of Girlfriends Past (New Line Cinema, PG-13)
Helvetia | The Acrobats (The Static Cult)
I Am Legend (Warner Bros., PG-13)
Jumper (20th Century Fox, PG-13)
Keeping the Mockingbird Alive | Mary Badham Recalls "Scout"
Kevin Renick | Albums
Kevin Renick | Films
Land of the Lost (Universal Pictures, PG-13)
Lima Charlie | It's So Easy To Be Creepy (s/r)
Lo Fine | Not for Us Two (Pigeon)
Love in October | Pontus, The Devil, and Me (The Musik Group)
Loxsly | Flashlights EP (s/r)
Lucinda Black Bear | ‘Capo My Heart' and Other Bear Songs (Eastern Spurs)
Midnight Juggernauts | Dystopia (Astralwerks)
Midnight Oil | Diesel and Dust (Sony/BMG Legacy)
New in Town (Lion's Gate; PG-13)
Norse Code Ratings Explained
Norse Code Ratings Explained
Norse Code | 01.06
Norse Code | 01.06
Norse Code | 05.05
Norse Code | 05.05
Norse Code | 06.05
Norse Code | 06.05
Norse Code | 10.05
Norse Code | 10.05
Norse Code | 10.06
Putois | The Problem Is Not a Problem Anymore (Cerebral Cliff)
Quarter Acre Lifestyle | Blood on the Lawn (s/r)
Rachel Taylor Brown | Half Hours With the Lower Creatures (Cutthroat Pop)
Rain: The Beatles Experience
Righteous Kill (Overture Films; R)
Rilo Kiley | 09.12.07
Running With Scissors (Sony Pictures, R)
Sian Alice Group | 59:59 (The Social Registry)
Silje Nes | Ames Room (FatCat)
Sissy Wish | Sparkling Nordic Electro-Pop
SLIFF 2007 Preview | Renick
Small Sins | Mood Swings (Astralwerks)
Son Ambulance | Someone Else's Déjà Vu (Saddle Creek)
Star Trek (Paramount Pictures, PG-13)
Taxi to the Dark Side (THINKFilm, R)
That You Efter?: Efterklang
The "Mac" Attack | Lindsey Buckingham's Sonic Adventures
The Departed (Warner Bros., R)
The Explorers Club | Freedom Wind (Dead Oceans)
The Fervor | Bleeder (Heartbeat Productions)
The Haunting in Connecticut (Lionsgate, PG-13)
The House Bunny (Columbia Pictures, PG-13)
The Instruments | Dark Smaland (Orange Twin)
The International (Columbia Pictures, R)
The Mist (Dimension Films, R)
The Photographic | Pictures of a Changing World (Galaxia)
The Raveonettes | Lust Lust Lust (Vice)
The Silver Seas | High Society (Cheap Lullaby)
The Strangers (Rogue Pictures, R)
The Time Traveler's Wife (New Line Cinema, PG-13)
The Ting Tings | We Started Nothing (Columbia/Red Ink)
The U.S. vs. John Lennon (Lions Gate, PG-13)
The X-Files: I Want To Believe (20th Century Fox, PG-13)
The Yarrows | Plum (Empyrean)
These Are Powers | Terrific Seasons (Hoss)
Thomas Dybdahl | Science (Recall)
Tift Merritt | A New Chapter, Another Country
To Kill a Mockingbird | Edison Theatre, St. Louis
Trouble the Water (Zeitgeist Films, NR)
Ween | 10.22.07
Woven | Designer Codes (s/r)
 
bigfatcat
Schlafly
legal advice
red gorilla
Paste
Ccina