I Predict A Graceful Expulsion
Reviews
DJ Away
Reviewed 2012-09-27
Reviewed 2012-09-27
Soul/folk/post-rock
From Swans to Spiritualized, this has been a fantastic year for music that appropriates and expands on gospel traditions, and Cold Specks offer another great release in this vein. The band aims for a quieter, lusher sound than the artists above, and frontwoman Al Spx’s achingly gorgeous vocals are authoritative but restrained. Wow. Favorites: 3, 4, 6, 7, 11. No FCCs detected.
1. (2:16)—Medium-slow guitar plucking. Subdued vocals. Strings and backing vocals in the chorus.
2. (2:29)—Slow. Starts sparely but builds and adds drums, washes of guitar, and strings over the song’s course.
3. *(4:05)—Mid-tempo. Starts with piano and vocals. Drums, strings and a choir emerge further on. Builds but never explodes. Chills the bones.
4. *(3:20)—Slow. Reverb-y guitar begins the song, and later a full band enters. Very catchy chorus.
5. (2:35)—Medium-fast. Lush, almost a fusion of shoegaze and soul.
6. *(3:50)—Mid-tempo. Gorgeous opening. Acoustic guitar dominates the first half. Drums and a choir break in, then recede.
7. *(4:14)—Medium-fast. Acoustic guitar with the occasional inclusion of a choir. In terms of power, Spx’s vocal delivery approaches Bob Dylan’s.
8. (3:48)—Mid-tempo. Piano-driven. Builds in the final third. A cappella ending.
9. (3:12)—Medium-fast. Full band enters a minute in.
10. (4:01)—Slow. Plucked guitar begins the song, and other instruments gradually enter until the song is very loud.
11. *(3:11)—Medium-slow. No full band, mostly just acoustic guitar and vocals. The restraint ends the album beautifully.
From Swans to Spiritualized, this has been a fantastic year for music that appropriates and expands on gospel traditions, and Cold Specks offer another great release in this vein. The band aims for a quieter, lusher sound than the artists above, and frontwoman Al Spx’s achingly gorgeous vocals are authoritative but restrained. Wow. Favorites: 3, 4, 6, 7, 11. No FCCs detected.
1. (2:16)—Medium-slow guitar plucking. Subdued vocals. Strings and backing vocals in the chorus.
2. (2:29)—Slow. Starts sparely but builds and adds drums, washes of guitar, and strings over the song’s course.
3. *(4:05)—Mid-tempo. Starts with piano and vocals. Drums, strings and a choir emerge further on. Builds but never explodes. Chills the bones.
4. *(3:20)—Slow. Reverb-y guitar begins the song, and later a full band enters. Very catchy chorus.
5. (2:35)—Medium-fast. Lush, almost a fusion of shoegaze and soul.
6. *(3:50)—Mid-tempo. Gorgeous opening. Acoustic guitar dominates the first half. Drums and a choir break in, then recede.
7. *(4:14)—Medium-fast. Acoustic guitar with the occasional inclusion of a choir. In terms of power, Spx’s vocal delivery approaches Bob Dylan’s.
8. (3:48)—Mid-tempo. Piano-driven. Builds in the final third. A cappella ending.
9. (3:12)—Medium-fast. Full band enters a minute in.
10. (4:01)—Slow. Plucked guitar begins the song, and other instruments gradually enter until the song is very loud.
11. *(3:11)—Medium-slow. No full band, mostly just acoustic guitar and vocals. The restraint ends the album beautifully.
Recent airplay
Winter Solstice
The Sunset Life (2012 in Review) — Jan 10, 2013
Holland
New and Old — Jan 04, 2013
When The City Lights Dim
Meow After Midnight: Best of Fall 2012 — Dec 26, 2012
Winter Solstice
Wait, what?! — Dec 07, 2012
Holland
The Sunset Life — Dec 06, 2012
The Mark
A Family Affair — Dec 06, 2012
Charting
2012-10-05 — 2012-12-07
| Week Ending | Airplays |
|---|---|
| Dec 9 | 3 |
| Dec 2 | 4 |
| Nov 25 | 1 |
| Nov 18 | 1 |
| Nov 4 | 1 |
| Oct 28 | 1 |
| Oct 21 | 1 |
| Oct 14 | 3 |
Track listing
| 1. | The Mark | ||
| 2. | Heavy Hands | ||
| 3. | Winter Solstice | ||
| 4. | When The City Lights Dim | ||
| 5. | Hector | ||
| 6. | Holland | ||
| 7. | Elephant Head | ||
| 8. | Send Your Youth | ||
| 9. | Blank Maps | ||
| 10. | Steady | ||
| 11. | Lay Me Down |