Life Without Sound
Reviews
Slow Proteo
Reviewed 2017-06-18
Reviewed 2017-06-18
Cloud Nothings // Life Without Sound
More of a produced sound than you might expect based off of their lo-fi pop history. Several songs stick out but there could be more differentiation – feels like the same structure and guitar tones repeat often and can drag. However, when vocalist Dylan Baldi really pushes his vocals and the band pushes there’s some great moments. Notes of Weezer, Real Estate, and a little Hot Hot Heat here.
1) Up to the Surface (3:58): Starts with a simple piano riff then picks up as vocals and guitar join. Guitar solo and noise leads into a solemn outro – “...the peace and terror of the mind”
2) Things are Right with You (4:24): Starts quick with catchy vocal hooks – like if the All-American rejects had some emotional depth.
3) Internal World** (3:46): Weezer-esque musical feel in the beginning – easy to sing along and has some clever little guitar phrases.
4) Darkened Rings* (3:32): Frantic guitar intro with plenty of fuzz – more aggressive vocals and instrumentation here.
5) Enter Entirely (4:53): Crunchy guitar chords over a slower beat building up to a pretty solid chorus. Drags a bit but has a decent outro guitar solo.
6) Modern Act** (4:09): About putting a face on when you feel like s#*t – “I have a life but I’m alone”
7) Sight Unseen (3:58): Pretty solid song with vocals going hard in the last chorus.
8) Strange Year* (3:26): Uneasy guitars and vocals settle into a slow interlude, then blows up halfway through – most impressive vocals on the album. Abrupt Ending.
9) Realize My Fate (5:24): Sparse guitar intro, self-reflection. Probably longer than it has to be, but there is some impressive drum work in the outro.
Slow Proteo
More of a produced sound than you might expect based off of their lo-fi pop history. Several songs stick out but there could be more differentiation – feels like the same structure and guitar tones repeat often and can drag. However, when vocalist Dylan Baldi really pushes his vocals and the band pushes there’s some great moments. Notes of Weezer, Real Estate, and a little Hot Hot Heat here.
1) Up to the Surface (3:58): Starts with a simple piano riff then picks up as vocals and guitar join. Guitar solo and noise leads into a solemn outro – “...the peace and terror of the mind”
2) Things are Right with You (4:24): Starts quick with catchy vocal hooks – like if the All-American rejects had some emotional depth.
3) Internal World** (3:46): Weezer-esque musical feel in the beginning – easy to sing along and has some clever little guitar phrases.
4) Darkened Rings* (3:32): Frantic guitar intro with plenty of fuzz – more aggressive vocals and instrumentation here.
5) Enter Entirely (4:53): Crunchy guitar chords over a slower beat building up to a pretty solid chorus. Drags a bit but has a decent outro guitar solo.
6) Modern Act** (4:09): About putting a face on when you feel like s#*t – “I have a life but I’m alone”
7) Sight Unseen (3:58): Pretty solid song with vocals going hard in the last chorus.
8) Strange Year* (3:26): Uneasy guitars and vocals settle into a slow interlude, then blows up halfway through – most impressive vocals on the album. Abrupt Ending.
9) Realize My Fate (5:24): Sparse guitar intro, self-reflection. Probably longer than it has to be, but there is some impressive drum work in the outro.
Slow Proteo
Recent airplay
Modern Act
KZSU Time Traveler — Jun 30, 2023
Modern Act
Sight Unseen
baggage claim — Nov 18, 2019
Modern Act
veggie tales — Jul 11, 2019
Sight Unseen
veggie tales — Oct 26, 2017
Strange Year
Waste FM — Aug 08, 2017
Charting
2017-06-21 — 2017-08-23
| Week Ending | Airplays |
|---|---|
| Aug 13 | 1 |
| Aug 6 | 1 |
| Jul 30 | 1 |
| Jul 23 | 2 |
| Jul 16 | 1 |
| Jul 2 | 2 |
| Jun 25 | 2 |
Track listing
| 1. | Up To The Surface | ||
| 2. | Things Are Right With You | ||
| 3. | Internal World | ||
| 4. | Darkened Rings | ||
| 5. | Enter Entirely | ||
| 6. | Modern Act | ||
| 7. | Sight Unseen | ||
| 8. | Strange Year | ||
| 9. | Realize My Fate |
