среда, 22. децембар 2010.

Consecration old interview (september 2004)



Consecration
(Danilo Nikodinovski, guitars, vocal)


H&H: What’s new in Consecration? I see you have some new members…

Danilo: Well, yeah, it’s pretty workaholic these days… We’ve finally decided to become serious, haha!


H&H: I’ve noticed that the keyboards are now more in the background than before. The guitar and the voice are the biggest stand-outs.

Danilo: That was the whole idea in the first place, but we had no luck in achieving it before. Now it’s ok.


H&H: Your sound is quite heavier nowadays, there are less technical parts and more depression. I can finally say you are a doom band now!

Danilo: Thank you! I’m glad one can hear what we wanted to achieve. Of course, we don’t want to corner ourselves into a doom territory, but we surely wanted to get away from the technical parts. Yet they are still present, in small bits and pieces...


H&H: You exist for 3,5 years and I am into your work since the Spring 2002. For the time being, with every line-up change I  was always getting the impression that you were becoming a new band. Have you found yourselves finally?

Danilo: Well, honestly, we were finding ourselves with every new line-up, and the search is not over yet! With every new change we become a new band, of course better than the previous one.


H&H: We await the final mix of your second official demo... What took it so long?

Danilo: Took it so long to record or to mix it? We recorded these two songs in two days, but the problem was with our producer, blEQ, who has lots of things to do beside recording and mixing and plus he can be really foolish sometimes. But we cannot do the mix without him. With time I guess we’ll become more confident in mixing our songs ourselves.


H&H: In the versions I heard on the radio there were 5 guitars playing simultaneously.  How to make that sound live, without losing its magic?

Danilo: It’s all in the energy, to make that vibe live, it doesn’t matter if there is a whole symphonic orchestra on the album or just one string of an acoustic guitar. Many people come to me to tell me that it would be great for Consecration if there could be another guitarist for the live shows, but honestly, I haven’t met here anyone yet who could play that guitar properly.


H&H: Does the music you create fulfill you or  make your emotional state more difficult? It is pretty fucked up to trade emotions for concentration during live performances… 

Danilo: It is hard to concentrate on vocals only when the music you create demands high volume, strength and preciseness. These days I’ve been watching the Opeth gig from London and even Mikael, who sings and plays guitar million times better than me, has some difficulties to concentrate on clean vocals while there are 2x200 watts wall-shaking distortions behind him...


H&H: Your songs are pretty original. Sources of inspiration? Music, everyday life, massive hangovers? Absinthe thoughts?

Danilo: Everything that surrounds us. It can be some quote from a movie, or a sentence from a dear person or some other band that I love… Or simply a pure alcohol hehe…


H&H: Influences?

Danilo: Isis, Katatonia, Opeth, Slowdive, Sigur Ros, Anathema, Nick Drake, The Gathering, In The Woods, Neurosis, Radiohead, Block Out, life in Serbia, everyday injustices… The list goes on, and that relates to my previous answer actually.

H&H: Don't get me wrong, but there are less and less people on your concerts (which shows the [bad] taste of the ‘audience’). Do you wait to finish the album and then plan to do a bigger promotion?

Danilo: We won’t wait for anything, the plan is to play live as much as possible. We plan a couple of shows in the future and we won’t leave the stage without at least an hour of playing.


H&H: What is your opinion about domestic bands and ’attempts’ of bands? It seems you’re not too enthusiastic for any co-operation…

Danilo: On the contrary, we are! It is good to have domestic bands, but not too many of them. The quality must prevail. We like Tibia, Draconic, Interfector, I like what is Magma doing, we wait finally to hear new Abonos... I had an opportunity to hear the unmixed version of new E-play, and it sounds very very good.


H&H: You had a couple of gigs out of Belgrade (Ruma, Novi Sad, Obrenovac)... Do you think that this type of music can be accepted in smaller places?

Danilo: The most important thing for us is to play live, the best we can, anywhere they invite us. It’s good for small towns to have any kind of gigs, the only thing is that there are not many people who will come to the show.


H&H: Do you consider your playing of music seriously, or we shall see students looking for jobs on the institutes in five years from now?

Danilo: It is a Don Quixote kind of struggle, but we are enthusiatic. Everything I play, I play seriously. But I doubt I could ever live off that. It remains to be seen, and the most important thing is that more and more people come to the shows, otherwise everything is in vain.

_
Interview by Biljana Zeković
(09.09.2004.)

setlists:
Obrenovac  27.08.2004.

1. Berchek
2. Absinthe Thoughts
3. Christ Goodbye (Saturnus)
4. Passage
5. Shelter (Me)

Filozof, Beograd 25.09.2004.

1. Berchek
2. Absinthe Thoughts
3. Christ Goodbye (Saturnus)
4. Passage
5. Cliffhangers
6. Aimless
7. Forgotten Hopes (Anathema)
8. Destiny Is Dead (Anathema)
9. One Last Goodbye (Anathema)
10. Shelter (Me)
11. Everything Is Coming Up Roses (Black)
12. eMotion

Consecration old interview (august 2002)

Consecration (SR-CG)




Hi. Please, introduce the band to us and tell us what you think is important about its brief history.

Danilo: The band exists for two years by now and it was formerly named The Lack Of Motivation. After our first demo, Arrival 2.001, we decided to change it [the band name] to Consecration. After some line-up changes (Nemanja, our former rhythm guitarist left and we changed two keyboard players), I took over the rhythm guitar duties (beside the vocal ones) and decided to invite Bane to our band to fill-in the sound we were to achieve. It was february this year (2002) when Bane came in.

Bane: Danilo called me up to ask if I wanted to join in. I already knew him for quite some time and was more than happy to say yes. I liked the atmosphere in the band and the music they created. We’ve done some small shows to get more expirienced on stage and I think we are getting better. We had quite successful gigs on Summer’s festival and our first solo gig in KST.


Who is in the band today and how do you function together?

Danilo: There are Miloš Savić (lead guitar), Milan Šuput (bass), Milan Jejina (drums), Branislav Stanković (keyboards) and me (Danilo Nikodinovski, vocal & rhythm guitar). We get along pretty good, and with time and practice we get more and more sure about what we are doing, the arrangements with time get more complex.

Bane: When I came in, I was very surprised to see how five musicians could get along so well, five musicians with very own distinct taste. We all know what we are to achieve in Consecration and we all share the same vision.

The word ‘consecration’ means ‘osvećenje’, ‘posvećenje’ (in serbian). Why the name and does it have some deeper meaning?

Danilo: Well, you’ll agree it’s much more inspiring than The Lack Of Motivation! The word itself I found in Saturnus’ lyrics, which Leš (the bassist) and I like very much, and one evening we sat and thought about a new band name, and decided ‘consecration’ was the right one. Atmosphere, if I could say so, that the name draws with itself is quite unique, and I think every one of us has his own consecration inside him in these dark times… You ask me about a deeper meaning, I’ll give you one – its meaning is very individual and I think there is nothing deeper than that.
“In silence true consecration comes.”

Bane: Danilo put it so well I couldn’t do better even if I tried, hehe…



How would you label the music you play? Is it gothic metal or…?

Bane: Oh… Well… Honestly, we don’t know what we play.

Danilo: …Music? (Haha…)

Bane: Well, music it is… Sometimes, hehe! Mainly, it’s everything, from gothic, heavy, doom, black, dark, electronica… Whatever comes to us! We don’t wish to corner ourselves with anything. I think that is the reason why Consecration has its own sound, both original and relaxing.

Danilo: We aren’t eccentric or something like “hey, let’s throw in some black metal, then little gothic, then slow it down more with some doom”(though it happens sometimes on rehearsals hehe)… I guess we could make an avantgarde sound of vast noise, because we all draw our own influences – everything we hear actually, and we don’t want to corner ourselves in one angle, that’s why we experiment with the sound, we want some new sounds happen every now and then. I am personally fed up with the riff/verse/chorus/solo cliché that is going on in metal for more than 20 years, and I think that nothing would really change in metal if it weren’t bands such as Arcturus, Opeth, Ulver, Emperor… Evolution in the sound, in the arrangement itself first.

Bane: The closest label would be “prog avantgarde doom/gothic metal”, haha…


What about your favorite bands? In what amount they influence the music you play? Do you play some covers on gigs?

Danilo: The interesting for this band is that everyone brought a specific genre. I listen to everything, but prefer to say I like doom mostly, bands such as Katatonia, Anathema, Opeth, Saturnus, My Dying Bride, Empyrium, In the Woods... Also, it is fair to mention Ulver, The Gathering, Amorphis etc. Savić is into prog a lot, Dream Theater kind of stuff, but Paradise Lost also. Leš is into death/old doom, and Jeki (the drummer) is into everything from jazz to metal (Dimmu Borgir, AC/DC)... There are some bands that we all like, for example finnish Yearning and their excellent (yet unfortunately underrated) Plaintive Scenes... Or Moonspell.... Or Depeche Mode, which we covered... Right now we’re listening to the latest The Third And The Mortal, a great album.

Bane: I like everything from classical music to ambiental and electronic music. There are really far too many bands to mention them all, but let’s say Emperor, Arcturus, Ulver, Peccatum, The Kovenant, Marduk, Limbonic Art, Mayhem, Dimmu Borgir, Dark Funeral, Morbid Angel, Nile, Hate Eternal, Sinister, Cryptopsy are my favorites. Plus I like bands such as Astral Projection, S.U.N. Project, Suicide Commando, Hocico, Nightmare Lodge, Enigma, Vangelis, Depeche Mode , Faith No More...

Danilo: Mike Patton is The King!

Bane: Definitely! I like lots of classical music, such as Bach, Mozart, Wagner, Haydn, Chopin, Borodin... Like I said, I could go on forever like this. Genre doesn’t matter, it’s the atmosphere that counts.

Danilo: Exactly. Depeche Mode are, for example, the band that creates much darker atmosphere than any black metal band. That’s why we have chosen to cover Enjoy The Silence, and Black’s Everything Is Coming Up Roses, which is one of the best goth songs ever written. And it was written in 1987! We also play Alma Mater by Moonspell, which has become some sort of a hymn for an encore, and we’ve been playing Crematory’s Tears Of Time for quite some time.



I’ve noticed that you played Depeche Mode’s Enjoy The Silence. Why that particular song, and how did you get the idea to cover it, considering the style of music you play?

Danilo: First we decided to cover Black’s Everything Is Coming Up Roses because it is so old (it was my favorite song in my early childhood days) and it sounds totally good in goth metal way. And then came Enjoy The Silence, which is popular even more. Bane called me up one day and suggested to cover it and I said “why the hell not?” The rest of the band agreed and… Here we are! The most thrilling part is that we practiced it only once before our show in KST June 11th, and already got great critics about it…

Bane: I think we did a nice pick with those songs. Depeche Mode is indeed a very sombre band and have those atmospheres that are adaptable to metal music. Black maybe not that much, but we realized that this Roses song could fit in so well with our style. And that’s why it was so exciting! Now I realize it is more interesting to cover a song that is from a non-metal territory… Maybe this will help the audience to pay attention to some bands that are not metal, but still have something in their music that is close to metal in some way…

Speaking about concerts, how much attention you pay to them and how important are they for you? Can you pick the most important gigs for you?


Bane: We haven’t had so many gigs yet, but strive to change that. Our shows are very important to us and we want to give the people the atmosphere that our music carries.

Danilo: The most important shows were in SKC on March 24th last year (my first show with The Lack Of Motivation), our first solo gig on Gothic Festival in KST (June 11th) and Metal Festival in KST two weeks later (June 25th 2002).


Do you like to perform live and how do you cope with it, considering all the problems that bands here have to struggle with?

Danilo: We like to play whenever and wherever they call us and we cope with it very well (thanx for noticing!), but the problems with the equipment are inevitable. We have 3 vocals, 2 guitars and 2 keyboards and it can be really a mess on stage. Fortunately we got ourselves our own sound engineer, Bleq (keyboard player of Block Out), who did a very good sound in KST June 11th. We are more than happy to have him with us in the future.

Bane: Bleq has definitely made our live sound better. The only problem that follows all bands in Serbia is the equipment that waits for us on stage...

Danilo: Hi Srećko, how do you do? (Haha...)

Bane: We are trying to collect the money for our own equipment, but, considering the fact how much the bands are paid here, that will happen in, like, xyz years...

About the demo/promo stuff, have you entered the studio yet and recorded something? If you do have a demo, could you please give us more info about it?


Danilo: Our first demo is entitled Arrival 2.001. We made it June last year and we aren’t satisfied with the result at all. It turned out more into some kind of putting those ideas on tape instead of something more serious. The production is ok, but it would’ve been better if the production was bad and the songs were played better. So, we didn’t care so much to promote it, it was played on the radio just to let the people know we exist. Consecration now sounds much more better than that demo. Actually, the only song that turned out good on it was the closing instrumental Gone. The rest of the recorded tracks are Arrival, While Taking A Breath and Way Past Bedtime.

Bane: We’ve begun re-doing those songs and making some new ones, so all of those old tracks sound entirely different now. We will enter the studio soon to record Emotion and maybe another song, and we’ll let that circle around as a promo. Our goal right now is to finish all the songs for the full-length.



Who writes lyrics and who does the music? Is it one person only, or all the members participate?

Danilo: I write all the lyrics, and for the music, it is usually one of the three of us (Savić, Bane and me) who gets some idea, riff or a melody and brings it to rehearsal and then we all work on it further on. This song Emotion we begin our gigs with, was written by Savić and myself, and the arrangement was done by the whole band, including Bane. Emotion is the first song he participated with his work.

Bane: Danilo said it all again... (Hehe)


Where does the inspiration come from? Is there any line that binds the songs into the whole, some global attitude you have as a band?

Danilo: The inspiration comes from an everyday life, everything around us. There is a specific mood crawling through all the songs... Atittude? No particular ideology, as long as there is sex and beer, hehe! True, Grim, Necro!!!

Bane: Mostly I do this because of art itself. But, of course, sex & beer first!!! True, Grim, Necro!!!


What are your lyrics about?

Danilo: About people, desolation, emotions, misunderstanding of them... Some verses are pretty much depressive, remind of those of Katatonia, Yearning, My Dying Bride...

Are the lyrics in English or Serbian? What’s your opinion towards making songs in mature tongue?

Danilo: The lyrics are in English, because it is much easier to sing them that way (and to remember them). All the lyrics I ever wrote are in English (except some very few which will probably never get any musical embodiment). The lyrics in Serbian can have sense, but not in metal. Maybe it would be interesting to hear Serbian sung in type of songs such as Ulver’s first and third albums (Bergtatt and Nattens Madrigal), because of the authentic Serbian voices, otherwise it is the lack of professionalism (not knowing the world’s famous language).


How and when are you planning to reach the international scene? Will you involve the internet promotion? What is your opinion about the internet as the source of media?

Bane: Well, soon I hope. We plan to record our first full-length till the end of the year, or during the next one, and then look for a foreign label to release it. We’ll see…

Danilo: Internet is the most powerful medium and today the music travels fastest by the internet. So, I consider it as the most important promotion source.

That would be all. Good luck in the future and say hello to the other members from Scissors. Stay in FULL METAL!

Bane: Thank you very much for this interview!

Danilo: Yeah, we enjoyed it very much! Greetings to you and to all readers of your zine!


Interview was done by Boris Todorović, august 2002


KST
11.06.2002.
setlist

1. Emotion
2. Tears Of Time (Crematory)
3. Enjoy The Silence (Depeche Mode)
4. Arrival
5. While Taking A Breath
6. Everything's Coming Up Roses (Black)
7. Way Past Bedtime
8. Alma Mater (Moonspell)

недеља, 19. децембар 2010.

Consecration gigs

here is the list of all Consecration gigs ever.

as The Lack Of Motivation:

2000:

29.04.2000. SKC mali klub
21.12.2000. IX Beogradska Gimnazija


2001:

*Danilo in (voice)
25.03.2001. SKC Velika Sala
*Nemanja out
*Danilo in (guitar), Saška in (keyboards)
23.09.2001. Fest, Zemun w/ Abonos, Death Legion

Consecration

2002:

*Bane in (keyboards)
30.03.2002. Gimnazija Sveti Sava, Beograd
18.05.2002. III Beogradska Gimnazija
11.06.2002. KST Gothic Night w/ DJ Stevie (prvi solo nastup)
25.06.2002. bašta KST festival
26.08.2002. bašta KST Summer's End fest


2003:

04.01.2003. KST
*Savić out
24.05.2003. KST w/ Kramp & Deceived
25.07.2003. Roof festival, Ruma w/ Draconic, Maroth, Interfector...
18.10.2003. KST w/ Kramp?
01.11.2003. Klub Doma Omladine w/ Korosy (Bul), Maroth
05.12.2003. Klub Doma Omladine


2004:

18.01.2004. Klub Doma Omladine, radio Hit 202
*Bane out
05.02.2004. NS Raiders, Novi Sad w/ Rain Delay (as trio)
02.05.2004. Klub Doma Omladine, radio Hit 202
21.05.2004. klub Doma Omladine
26.06.2004. Trg Republike Beograda, godišnjica radija Hit 202
*Nemanja in (keyboards)
27.08.2004. Obrenovac
*Laza in (saxophone)
25.09.2004. klub Filozof w/ Rain Delay
05.10.2004. klub Stratus w/ Kramp
05.11.2004. klub Filozof, radio hit 202, demo maraton
29.11.2004. klub SKC
11.12.2004. klub Marfi, Podgorica, Crna Gora w/ Withed Tears
30.12.2004. klub Filozof, radio 202, hit godine


2005:

09.01.2005. klub Plato, Bor
22.01.2005. klub Filozof, radio 202, Demo Masters 2004
24.02.2005. Finale Demo Masters, Studio 6, Radio Beograd
27.02.2005. klub Stratus, Zemun
18.03.2005. klub Filozof, Finale Demo Masters 2
05.04.2005. klub SKC w/ To/Die/For (FIN), Soul Relic (FIN), Das Scheit (GER)
08.07.2005. EXIT festival, Novi Sad (nije sviran)
12.07.2005. klub SKC, promocija Rain Delay w/ Tales Of Dark
*Leš out, Laza in (bass)
30.08.2005. bašta KST w/ Token, Interfector, Kaoar, Monument
31.10.2005. Akademija, Halloween special w/ Interfector, Darkshines
30.12.2005. klub SKC, Hit godine 202


2006:

14.01.2006. klub SKC, Hit godine 202
05.03.2006. Dom Omladine w/ Charon (FIN), Phantasmagoria (HR), Rain Delay, Follower
26.05.2006. Dom Omladine w/ Zeus Faber (HR) & Yobo
30.06.2006. Dom Omladine w/ Ana Never
15.07.2006. Kragujevac, Dom Omladine w/ Darkshines
28.07.2006. Sremska Mitrovica w/ Darkshines & Rain Delay
02.08.2006. Zaječar Trg
03.08.2006. Zaječar, Gitarijada stadion
05.08.2006. Zaječar, Gitarijada stadion
23.09.2006. Dom Omladine Metal Sound fest w/ Space Eater
23.12.2006. Dom Omladine w/ Through Art & Nocturnal Tears


2007:

*Jeki out, Matija in (drums)
03.03.2007. SKC w/ Draconic & Father (HR)
23.03.2007. Metal Battle fest
18.05.2007. SKC Livingroom
03.06.2007. SKC Mala sala, Metal Battle
11.07.2007. SKC w/ Chang Ffos (HR) & Hang
15.07.2007. Exit Festival, Novi Sad w/ Satyricon (NOR)
17.07.2007. Klub SKC, Metal Battle finale
20.07.2007. Bašta SKC, humanitarni koncert za Unu i Tošu
03.10.2007. SKC Livingroom w/ Knut (SWI) & Monno (SWI)
12.10.2007. Banjaluka, Republika Srpska
19.10.2007. SKC Velika sala w/ Block Out
15.12.2007. SKC w/ Hesus attor (HR) & Plug n' Play



2008:

14.03.2008. Lumiere, Kragujevac w/ Decontrolled & Boneyard
02.04.2008. SKC Livingroom Consecration & Temple Of The Smoke Big Band
11.04.2008. Trema, Novi Sad w/ Plug n' Play & Grate
10.05.2008. SKC Livingroom w/ The Ocean (GER)
*03.09.2008. SKC Livingroom, Noise Of Droning Improvisations (improv session)
*Četka in (guitar)
24.10.2008. Klub 21, Pančevo w/ Nešto Najgore
26.10.2008. SKC Livingroom w/ Nešto Najgore
21.12.2008. SKC Livingroom w/ Azil 5


2009:

16.01.2009. Trema, Novi Sad w/ Azil 5
27.03.2009. Palach, Rijeka (HR) w/ Hesus Attor
11.04.2009. SKC Livingroom w/ Hesus Attor (HR) & Organized Chaos
22.05.2009. SKC Livingroom w/ Went & Sound Eleven
30.05.2009. Terrarossa, Kikinda w/ Amentes
12.06.2009. Elektrika, Pančevo
19.06.2009. SKC Bašta, ARF Beogradski Letnji Rock Festival
06.08.2009. Naša Stvar Open Air Fest, Teslić, Republika Srpska w/ Magma & Downstroy & Tanker
26.08.2009. Povetarac
27.09.2009. Danguba w/ Tanker & Magma
17.10.2009. Pravni Fakultet, Niš w/ Styptic & Deadrise
27.11.2009. Dom Omladine Velika Sala, FENODOM festival


2010:


16.01.2010. Studio 21, Pančevo w/ Fancy Frogs
*Laza out, Dejv in (bass)
03.04.2010. Pantha Rei, Bačka Topola w/ Hesus Attor
04.04.2010. CK13, Novi Sad w/ Hesus Attor
08.04.2010. AKC Medika, Zagreb, Hrvatska w/ Hesus Attor
09.04.2010. Palach, Rijeka, Hrvatska w/ Hesus Attor
10.04.2010. SKC Livingroom w/ Hesus Attor
14.04.2010. Demofest Klub, Banjaluka, Republika Srpska w/ Magma & Monument
13.06.2010. KC Grad w/ The Ocean (GER)
11.07.2010. Exit Festival w/ Cathedral (UK) & Faith No More (USA)
*Nemanja out
29.10.2010. Mladost, Subotica
12.11.2010. Akademija
14.11.2010. Ciklon w/ Decontrolled, Through Art, Violent Chapter
28.11.2010. Coupe, Pančevo


2011:

*Četka out
01.04.2011. Akademija
20.05.2011. Kolos Rock Fest w/ Block Out, Goribor, Marty Friedman (USA) - cancelled
06.06.2011. Studentski Grad, Novi Beograd w/ Block Out
24.06.2011. Route 66, Novi Sad w/ Groteska, Pry
03.09.2011. Lađa
15.10.2011. Crni Bik, Novi Sad w/ Nova
21.10.2011. Mladost, Subotica w/ Latest Disgrace
22.10.2011. UK Parobrod
03.12.2011. Žica
17.12.2011. Crni Bik, Novi Sad
24.12.2011. Fest, Zemun w/ Rain Delay


2012:

10.02.2012. Bigz Scena w/ Magma
08.06.2012. Rokaj Fest, Zagreb w/ Slayer, Mastodon, Gojira

петак, 10. децембар 2010.

the lists: 2010


1. Anathema - We're Here Because We're Here (Kscope)

The wait was finally over. The new chapter begun with this one. During the past couple of years the band didn't have a label or a tour manager, so the band was kept alive by the fans' donations. Some of the songs were available for download via their site. Finally, they put their shite together, asked Steven Wilson for some production help and here it was. We're Here Because We're Here was a strong, yet still kind of modest, brave statement. Whether you liked it or not, Anathema were doing this again.

The songs were great. Even if the clinically pretty clear production of Steven Wilson's mixdown wasn't something the fans got used to, Steven did a great job of stripping down some of the tracks to the more bare side of the harmonies. This album had less psychedelia of A Fine Day To Exit and more simplicity of A Natural Disaster. More importantly, a great difference were these newfound positive views and aspects and brightness of living and having close friends.

Some journalists called We're Here a prog album. I wouldn't tire myself of putting Anathema in a proper genre, or genres. They play great music for so long, it stopped being of any importance what the fuck it was called. It was always Anathema and that was most important. These guys were capable of doing covers of Iron Maiden, Nick Drake, Fleetwood Mac, Pink Floyd or Led Zep and then some of their own doom relics such as Sleepless or A Dying Qish off the first albums. Anathema were this great band with proper musicianship in it and the young world of newfound Porcupine Tree fanbase was going to realize that for the first time in their lives too. Cause Anathema have been here for so long, the only thing is that they missed the hyperdownload era because of the hiatus of seven years the band was experiencing after the last full length.

The feel of Anathema was undeniably there with the Everything opener. Echoing voice of Vince crossed with some gentle phaser (flanger?) on Danny's guitar and the atmosphere was set properly. It was a prog rockish piece with a post rock influence and this theme circling round and round. Summernight Horizon was a strong one. I remember I fell on my ass when Danny played a demo of it some two and a half years ago, when he was visiting Belgrade for his acoustic show. Dreaming Light was a piano driven ballad with a scent of some Lennon and Sigur Ros, while Presence reminded of a spoken word intro of Hope, a song made fourteen years ago. The themes of eternal life now seemed more important than ever. However, the ultimate highlight was A Simple Mistake that summed up the band's whole discography in eight minutes. No, there weren't Silent Enigma era growling vocals on there, but the atmosphere of a falling soul that would rise again in a glorious light couple of songs later (Hindsight, with a introing bass that reminded me of some Mogwai song very time I heard it) and this transition was clearly visible and audible.

We're Here Because We're Here was a record of change, a final transition from melancholy turning into bright new morning of light, hope and newfound happiness that love was offering. I have this feelings and I don't know why was this line from one of the previous albums. It seems that the guys finally figured those out.

Thanks guys. And welcome back.



2. Autechre - Oversteps (Warp) | 3. Autechre - Move Of Ten (Warp)

Aah, Autechre. I loved their first albums, especially Incunabula (1993) and Amber (1994). Whenever I think of synth, keyboards, synth pads or anything with ambient music and beauty around it, I think of Autechre. The later albums such as Tri Repetae (1995) and Chiastic Slide (1997) showed much experimentation and the progress the duo was always keen on. LP5 (1998) was a peak of their unique style and it is only now that I realize how much have LP5 influenced Radiohead and the boys when they were making Kid Amnesiac.

Confield (2001), Draft 7.30 (2003) and Untilted (2005) were true electronic avantgarde. There wasn't any borders to Brown's and Booth's imagination - it seemed they could do anything, to make any machinery sound musical. Those albums might sound very difficult and too hermetic for the fans of Ae's early work, but with enough time spent - and more importantly, right state of mind - true reward was waiting for the patient ones. Those albums were more about rhythm and broken (well, shattered is a better word) beats while the melodies were so alienated, overtweaked and buried in the mix, the beats themselves were actually giving away the melodies. Quaristice (2008) was a bit of a strange, transitional kind of record. it had 20 (!) songs and a couple of different versions of the album, so the songs and the album were more of a palette that showed openendedness of the tracks.

On the other hand, Oversteps is something rather special. It is Autechre with more melody and brightness, something that resembles their earlier work. But, the strange beats are still there. Oversteps is like Autechre have taken all of their discography and made kind of album the fans would love them to make. Which is odd enough, cause every Autechre fan has their own favorite record. Which one is mine? Honestly, I don't know. It depends on the occasion and the mood I'm in. I will always love Incunabula cause of 444 (my favorite Ae track by far) and Kalpol Introl, although Amber is Incunabula improved. Tri Repetae is perhaps the most likable Ae record in a sense that they found themselves there. Later on they progressed from that point, so... It's all down to one's feeling or mood. I know that I have to listen to either Draft 7.30 or Untilted with a clear head cause if I was nervous or worrying about something... It would fuck me up. It is amazing how Autechre's music cures me and brightens me up. Intellectual catharsis? Perhaps.

Oversteps is no different. Move Of Ten too. Move Of Ten is actually an EP that followed a couple of months later. It's Oversteps improved and is not, depending on the view. It's more mechanical, that's for sure, cause the beats are upfront. Oversteps has the beautiful reverbed pads that always made me think of Autechre when someone said the magic word... 'synth'. Ilanders is one of the best Autechre tracks, reminding a bit of Rale, but not as dark. R ess has more of that dark ambience and See On See is just plain wonderful with shining high pitched overtones. Known(1) is one of the stranger tracks Ae always have on their albums and Yuop is a hidden gem waiting at the end of the album. Move Of Ten is Autechre moving often, Oversteps with a bit more groove - y7 is fantastic, and so is Rew(1) and Iris Was A Pupil. There are some AFX flashbacks too, such as M62 (Autechre going 4/4? Nooooo haha). All in all, what makes Autechre special? I don't know, and maybe I don't wanna know. All I know is that that something is in these two records and I feel lucky being able to enjoy them. Welcome back.


4. Oceansize - Self Preserved While The Bodies Float Up (Superball)

For some reason I didn't like the previous Frames so much. But this one... This one rocked the shite properly good again.

Oceansize were angry, emotive and hungry with this one. Hungry for exciting melodies and psyched out rhythm parts. The opener Part Cardiac hit the right spot - right through the chest. Superimposer continued the ride through the prog park, although the best stuff happened later on the album. Ransoms was giving this good old Fender on a singlecoil neck pickup the most beautiful treatment it could get. Every drum snare was also caressing the song with every beat. Nothing was rushed and the emotion was intact. Ransoms was one of the most beautiful soundscapes these Manchester lads ever wrote. Silent / Transparent showed the silent-to-loud affinity in a best possible way, only to fuck everyone's mind with a three minute brainstormer that It's My Tail And I'll Chase It If I Want To was.

Self Preserved While The Bodies Float Up showed Oceansize at their best. They've become one of the bands on the top of my must-see-live list.


5. Massive Attack - Heligoland (Virgin)

I honestly didn't like this at all at first. I was still pretty much hooked on 100th Window and Mezzanine I subconsciously wanted something in the vein of those two. Heligoland sounded too happy and poppy for its own sake. It took me a whole year to pass to sit up and listen to Heligoland with fresh ears and pay attention closely to what it was all about.

The only two tracks I liked instantly were Atlas Air and Rush Minute, cause of Robert del Naja's distinctive trademark massive voice. The other guests on the album I had troubles with at first, as the music was more in the vein of Protection than Mezzanine - the music was backing up the vocals and not the other way round. Mezzanine and especially 100th Window had that thick sticky serpentine atmosphere with voices topping that. On Heligoland, as with Anathema's new record for instance, everything is more pure and clean.

Flat Of The Blade had Elbow's Guy gracing the tune, while Paradise Circus was a centerfold gem with a gal Hope Sandoval of Mazzy Star fame, pouring her heart out whispering. I still have the strongest affection for Rush Minute and Atlas Air, although I have to say Splitting The Atom, Girl I Love You, Saturday Come Slow and Pray For Rain are all excellent tracks. Heligoland takes some time and when it gets you, it's more than rewarding. Massive, welcome back.


6. Swans - My Father Will Guide Me Up A Rope To The Sky (Young God)

What a comeback. Swans were influencing the whole scene of extreme music, was it metal, industrial, gothic, noise or whatever. Eighties and Nineties were the era of their realm - Children Of God, White Light From The Mouth Of Infinity and the best of them all, The Great Annihilator. Soundtracks For The Blind was this gigantic piece of experimental music that introduced some drone music, as well as some serious sampling (Neurosis and Godspeed You Black Emperor! later would rely on those heavily). The demise of Swans was a logical step, because they sucked all the energy out, splashed it like feces onto people's faces and hearts and the tomb was secured afterwards.

Michael Gira made some acoustic records in the meantime (even played live in Belgrade in Dom Omladine in 2004 and that was a hell of a show) and decided to resurrect the damn beast again. Jarboe went completely left-field in the meantime, so taking her back in the band was out of the question. However, in all honesty My Father wasn't so ominious one might expect. The opener No Words / No Thoughts was a strong one, and no doubt that after ten seconds of it the thought would slash your mind like a razorblade - this is Swans. However, Michael Gira confessed a few months after the release that he regretted that the tortured intro to this song didn't last ten minutes instead of just three. Now, that would be some real shit we're talking here.

My Birth gave the scent of old Swans back again. Although... It seemed like the song wasn't finished yet. The songs were naked and bare and they would probably get a fuller shape on the gigs with live band like this twenty legged insect making a feast for the queen. However, You Fucking People Make Me Sick and Eden Prison are the clear highlights of the album, bringing some fresh ingredients to the Swans table and not just revisiting the old ghosts of the past.

Swans are now topping the must-see-live list along with Neurosis. Although Swans already confirmed Zagreb for May 2011 so... Looking forward to that one.


7. Deftones - Diamond Eyes (Reprise)

Wow. I liked Deftones before. Loved the singles but couldn't listen to the whole albums in a row. Diamond
Eyes
slapped me in the face and track by track, I was playing the whole album without skipping any tracks.

The massive production is what got me hooked first. The Meshuggah flu of all the heavy bands throwing their seven string guitars to the garbage and getting eight strings instead got into Stephen Carpenter too. Yet he knew what to do with it. He made a couple of super heavy riffs that made the title track, and especially You've Seen The Butcher so huge, memorable, heavy and catchy. The Butcher is certainly the best metal track in 2010. The djent (I just heard the word recently and hate it already, since it sounds so stupid) style of playing the eight string guitar is shown wonderfully. Chino's voice is present in the mix just rightly. He was never a perfect singer, but the clever articulation and good arrangement of it did the songs great favors.

The funny thing is that I had some melody in my mind for some time and knew the melody was not mine, since I had the whole arrangement of the song (the drum fills kicking in and everything) in my head already. It was couple of months later after listening to this album. I needed a couple of days of mind boggling to find out the chords were the ones introing the Beauty School. And the funny part was that I was never a fan of the track before that moment - the reason why I had it in my head was because I played The Butcher for a lot of times, and this song was the next one on the album. So I must have heard its intro as many times as I played The Butcher as well. Song by song, I reached the end of the album and liked every track eventually. Deftones were a great band that made a glorious comeback with Diamond Eyes. The mainstream was also happy, cause there was nothing good in it since last year's Alice In Chains album.


8. Agalloch - Marrow Of The Spirit (Profound Lore)

Black Lake Nidstång was the most pleasantly surprising track of the whole year. It was a long time ago when I heard so devoted vocal lines in a black metal or a doom metal song last time. This song explained the core of the band, not just the nature-loving tree-hugging thing, but the earthly rooted nihilism towards everything man/men ruined. The screams were tortured, honest and from the depth of the heart. The Moog part in the middle reminded of some Neurosis off Given To The Rising and that level of atmosphere deserves only applause.

The band made good albums in the past. 1999's Pale Folklore was a couple of years late with the pagan/nature/black metal thing the Europeans cherished earlier (Ulver on Bergtatt) and 2002's The Mantle showed some serious creative aspects of the band. 2006's Ashes Against The Grain I didn't like for some reason. Maybe it was too polished, or perhaps I wasn't interested in checking out all the bands that were running for a train with post- things written on the wagons. However, the band had a break after that one and returned with a piece that could be described as their most mature, dark and demanding. The whole post- hype passed, so they could cool their heads and make a record that was more honest and not set to any trend visible at the horizon.

Into The Painted Grey shows the Ulver Bergtatt affinity again, but in a more gentle way. The back to basics system the band used by recording on analogue again and using the best amps and guitars with only a couple of selected pedals, really improved the way the band was putting the ideas down on tape. Everything works on Marrow Of The Spirit and me being known as not-the-biggest fan-of-all-that-is-black-metal kind of person, by rating this album so high, must add that band like Agalloch returned me some faith in black metal and the good aspects of making and playing it.


9. Mike Patton - Mondo Cane (Ipecac)


10. Deathspell Omega - Paracletus (Norma Evangelium Diaboli)



the lists: 2009


1. Alice In Chains - Black Gives Way To Blue (Virgin)

This was the best comeback for sometime. Sure, Jerry Cantrell could make another solo album, but that wouldn't have the weight Alice In Chains' reunion did. Jerry found a new singer, who also played the guitar well, so the new album was made.

Black Gives Way To Blue didn't disappoint at all - Check My BrainA Looking In View and Private Hell were all excellent tracks that could easily top Would, Angry ChairThem BonesNutshell or Man In The Box of the glorious pasts - without the nostalgia effect though. When The Sun Rose AgainYour Decision and the title track were ballad pieces, where the title track was dedicated to Layne Staley and brought some Elton John guest appearances as well. Black Gives Way To Blue was important record and it had all the elements Alice In Chains fans could possibly desire - the big riffs, recognizable vocal harmonies of old and the atmosphere only a Seattle based band of the Nineties could grasp.

The spirit of Layne Staley could live on and he could certainly feel glad for the guys making him such an honor, by making the band alive again and delivering the music goods properly.


2. Isis - Wavering Radiant (Ipecac)

Ghost Key was by far the best song of 2009. It showed everything Isis were about. The production on Wavering Radiant was the best ever, and they finally made an album that sounded one hundred per cent perfect. The drummer even noted that this was the first Isis studio recording on which he actually knew all the songs' arrangements while playing. Speaking of which, the drums never sounded better, every beat, every cymbal hit. The reverbed snare sound at 3.19 in Ghost Key got me every time like a black shining star falling into golden water.

The band also used lots of different guitars and amps, some of the guitars being EGC Aluminum Custom Made. The sound of the album was a more developed version of In The Absence Of Truth (as sort of Panopticon was to Oceaniac), being more prog than post. I also managed to see the band live in Zagreb again and they destroyed alright. Too bad they decided to call it a day couple of months afterwards, although it was a rather conscious decision. They toured so much during the decade and played / gave everything they could possibly do, considering the genre(s) they were swimming in. They carried the flag of this whole post metal thing and decided it was right to pull off when they felt there was nothing more important / visionary to add.

Wavering Radiant would remain this glorious swansong of the band and, even if it wouldn't prove to be the favorite album among the fans, it would remain the most proper sounding one in terms of production, playing and the clearance of the sounds.


3. Mastodon - Crack The Skye (Reprise)

Mastodon and Baroness were sharing similar affection for their vision of metal, although Mastodon were always more into prog. Crack The Skye was the first Mastodon record I really liked as a whole. Everything worked perfectly on this one, even the ludicrous concept they had again. The production was the best yet and every element had its distinct color needed, to transform the vision into audible element and vice versa.

Oblivion and Divinations were the clear highlights of the album, although the mammoth The Czar was hit all the right prog spots rather successfully. Crack The Skye was a complex, multi-layered record and it contained maybe a song too much. The vocals improved a lot, all three of them, and the newfound harmonies made Mastodon listens much more interesting to investigate. All in all, thinking man's metal got them some new epic heroes.


4. Therapy? - Crooked Timber (DR2)

I honestly didn't believe Therapy? would come back with such a badass album. They were always there during the 2000's. Making good records, but Crooked Timber was finally the one full of hits. Exiles is one of their finest tracks.


5. Them Crooked Vultures - Them Crooked Vultures (RCA)

I wasn't going to include this one to the list first, but after some more serious repeated listens I realized how important this record was, and how important Josh Homme and the guys were in today's rock n' roll.

New FangElephants and Mind Rraser, No Chaser were the hits, although the whole album had that infectious riffing and the bluesy vibe Mr. Homme mastered with Kyuss and Queens Of The Stone Age. The guitars, pedals and the amps he used were making all us guitar players / equipment lovers wet. John Paul Jones of mighy Led Zeppelin and Dave Grohl together with Josh made Them Crooked Vultures the best supergroup trio one could get in 2009.

The production of the album was awesome and it was nice to hear that together with Isis' Wavering Radiant someone was also enjoying using the tape recorders as well.


6. Tim Hecker - An Imaginary Country (Kranky)


7. Sunn O))) - Monoliths & Dimensions (Southern Lord)


8. Jodis - Secret House (Hydra Head)

Wow. I wasn't expecting this. This was a collaborative record between James Plotkin of Khanate and Aaron Turner of Isis, so this was kind of ambient blues record with a significant touch of drone.

Secret House was so vast and atmospheric. Like a music companion to a movie I liked the most in 2009, Jarmusch's Limits Of Control. Everything was so open for any interpretation and those were limitless. Well, limited only by the imagination of a mind.

Aaron's voice was so improved by this point - he sang like never before in Isis, open-ended and passionate. The reverbs and delays were so fantastic one could hear every echo trail clearly. The title track and Follow The Dogs might be the highlights of the album, although Secret House had the similar effect as Bohren & Der Club Of Gore's Dolores had - you got both mesmerized and hypnotized in its embrace, you wished you'd never leave the blue cocoon it gave. I got me more into blues by then so Secret House was the best way of marrying both roots (blues) and experimentation (drone) into this biggest surprising slow droning eargasm of an album.


9. Monolake - Silence (Imbalance Computer Music)

Robert Henke was doing this ambient minimalistic electronic music and he excelled at it on Silence. It would be the greatest minimal record since Plastikman's Closer. Henke even made a small homage to sir Ritchie naming a track Reconnect, strongly reminiscent of Plastikman's Disconnect with the synth sounds.

Far Red and Avalanche were the more dynamic pieces, that were so good in adding several dimensions production wise; the ambient parts had so much depth they pulled your mind further into the blackness of space, while some elements, such as the drum loops stood right in front of you, not letting you focus on the secrecy of the ambience from behind.

Autechre would already gone too abstractly insane with their newer releases and Aphex got quiet with some other projects as The Tuss, so Monolake's Silence was the right portion of dynamic darkness needed for the electricity to shine.


10. Katatonia - Night Is The New Day (Peaceville)


11. W.A.S.P. - Babylon (Demolition)

honorable mentions:


12. Baroness - Blue Record (Relapse)

This was a metal surprise of the year. Blue Record got me reminded of why were Metallica's and Iron Maiden's records of old so special at the time they were released back in the day. It also brought back the retro vibe of listening to Sabbath's Master Of Reality for example. Baroness had the riffs, the melodies, proper arrangements. Even acoustic interludes. Together with Mastodon they were a fresh breeze of metal, saying and showing there's more to it than just headbanging and triggered drums at 200 beats per minute.

 Jake Leg and A Horse Called Golgotha were the highlights, although the whole Blue Record was an easy going one. The vintage-ness of one Thin Lizzy and occasional psychedelic elements were only adding to the uniqueness and the enjoyment of being proud to be a metalhead again.


13. Tortoise - Beacons Of Ancestorship (Thrill Jockey)

These Chicago loonies were really something. They were wrongly tagged as postrock in the past, only because the damn journalists didn't know what to call them. Still they had troubles in calling them, jazz musicians, free experimentalists, the weirdos of indie rock... The list went on.

Yinxianghechengqi wasn't just this song played so fantastically well, it also showed the genuine joy of playing the band always had. At the other hand, Charteroak Foundation was this reflective closing piece that brought back some nostalgic sounds that Portishead were cherishing too on their latest album. Everything about Beacons Of Ancestorship seemed simple, but it was far from that. The only simplicity was the freeness of the spirits to evolve further into lots of hidden territories of music, awaiting somewhere to be found.

The groove could be found in a single triangle or a broken Casio toy synth, and that was the beauty of Tortoise. Prog rock? Jazz kraut? Spaghetti lounge? Yes. Everything was possible and enjoyable with Beacons. Go figure.

четвртак, 9. децембар 2010.

the lists: 2008


1. Portishead - Third (Universal)

I had a strange thing with this record. I liked it so much when it came out I played it like insane. But then, all of a sudden, I sort of overplayed it and couldn't put it on again for a year or so.

This was a perfect sounding record. The band came back from a long hiatus and they certainly had lots of stuff to play. Machine Gun I liked best, because it was the most aggressive one, in your face, and it married the modern electronic thing in a glorious love with the retro style of making music, playing, producing. Everything was so real about this record it sort of felt unreal, like a Lynchean flick. The tortured wails of Beth were giving unpleasant chills to the listener every now and then, and the band just rocked with all the pedals, loops, guitars, tape echos, old synths (just one listen to The Rip gave so much nostalgia for the analogue synths of old) and what not. Threads was a hidden gem, fantastic closer full of Adrian Utley's doomy riffs and Beth's peak of emotive performance.

I was so thrilled about the sounds and the production of Third I overlooked the fact that this was a downer album. That's probably when I started to feel weird and stopped playing it over and over again. The opium scented drawers were closed, although its claws seemed irresistible those first times you started to discover this album. Anyway, Portishead were back and they were great. Not for every day but for those nights of quiet desperation and/or wonder - they were ace.


2. Bohren & Der Club Of Gore - Dolores (PIAS)

This was excellent jazz. Mixture of jazz and doom and drone actually. I knew the band from before, as my bro and Vanja were mentioning them more often, although Cvele got me reminded to check out their best one, Sunset Mission (2000). Dolores was great too, but heavier and slower.

The mixed feelings of ultimate chill, relaxed crawling sounds and downer smoky club atmosphere were all adding to the uniqueness of this German band. They were around for a long time and, although it seemed like they were always playing similar tracks or the same tracks all the time, but only in a slightly different way, it was something undeniably charismatic and charmingly Lynchean about them, you could just lose yourself in the woods where Laura Palmer was found, while listening to Dolores repeatedly.

This was the perfect mood music, the moodiest of them all, if you like. It was working both ways, both places, rural or urban - being alone in the woods or being at the top of a building in a flat with huge windows and a nice view with some scotch on the rocks caressing your insides.


3. Autechre - Quaristice (Warp)


4. Anathema - Hindsight (Kscope)

This was an acoustic compilation of old stuff being played again and rerecorded. It sort of tested waters before the band started working on their new album. I loved it cause I brought Danny and Duncan to play this acoustic gig in Belgrade on 9th March 2008. The versions they played on the gig were the same ones that were going to be released on Hindsight couple of months later, so we had the opportunity to hear those acoustic versions first on this special concert. I especially loved Are You There? which was kind of Nick Drake influenced in this new version. I finally had the balls to cover it myself and play it later, on 3rd December 2010, on this wonderful Amaranth gig.

The rest of the songs were giving nice creeps to the spine as well, especially FlyingAngelica or Temporary Peace (now played on Rhodes/Kurzweil and a cello instead of a guitar). Flying had the guest appearance from Duncan playing the mandolin. Inner Silence and Fragile Dreams got also a nicer treatment and the Hindsight showed clearly that Anathema had lots more hits that a single album could contain. And the wait for a new studio album seemed longer than ever.


5. Tiamat - Amanethes (Nuclear Blast)


6. Opeth - Watershed (Roadrunner)

I didn't like the previous Ghost Reveries so much, but they got me back with this one. Mikael not only improved his singings by now, he was singing like a nightingale. The opener Coil showed it clearly, together with some Jimmy Page acoustic homages, together with some lush female vocal appearances.

Burden was the acoustic piece that brought back the acoustics with nylon strings, so the nostalgia thing was hitting me again. The ending of a song had this great gag of Mikael playing this acoustic part and somebody from the band, or studio, was tuning down the strings while he was still playing - it turned out great and unintentional, a tiny detail that often means more to me than anyone else.

The added keyboard in the band started to work with this one, and the heaviness of the riffs got the opposite in those keys, sounding like they were taken off some sixties/seventies progressive record only Mikael knew about. I didn't care for this album that much until I realized at some point that I was playing it more often than anything else in 2008. So, Opeth were still great and the worldwide recognition and success didn't seem to influence them in a badly way.


7. Enslaved - Vertebrae (Indie Recordings)

These Newyorkers were playing Melvins' grunge/sludge, some Bad Brains core, prog and metal with a good portion of awesome dub added. It sounded so fresh and pure the word crossover sounded ugly.

The riffs were steady and the melodies present in Bay Vs. Leonard, the drummer payed homage to Dave Lombardo in Who Wants To Die?, while the dub nodders smiled to Mortar Dub, as the space echoes trailed off together with that lovely reverbed drum snare. I was getting more into dub as my brother played it more often, and Dub Trio were a great band for introducing me to it, while still adding serious portion of metal to the table.

Mike Patton not only released this album on his own Ipecac label, he also made a guest appearance on No Flag, a song so good I couldn't help myself but not thinking this was the closest thing Faith No More would sound if they ever reformed again (and they did! A year later, but didn't record anything new). Another Sound Is Dying was so healthy and natural, you could spin it over and over again. Every song had elements of something that seemed familiar, although they covered every genre so good like they invented it themselves.


8. Nine Inch Nails - Ghosts I-IV (The Null Corporation)


9. Fennesz - Black Sea (Touch)

Frank Zappa once said that writing about music was like dancing about architecture. It seemed that I was doing pretty well in describing every album so far, but with some abstract ones like this one some difficulties might occur along the way.

Glide was the absolute highlight of the album. A couple of us were lucky to see Fennesz perform live in Belgrade the same year and I think it was this song, if I rememeber correctly, that got the best atmosphere going on in the venue. The song growed and growed until the proportions of it got so huge, it was pretty much close to The Gathering's How To Measure A Planet that was made ten years earlier. Although Fennesz seemed to swim well in those neverending waves of static, blue electricity and harmonies that other planets were emitting. He sort of put everything together and made a song out of it.

The other songs off Black Sea were more minimal and glitchy. Grey Scale reminded of Lanterna again, with the acoustic guitar being hacked by a virus, surrendering to the errors and doing a strange symbiosis in the end. The self-titled opener was this noisy peace that got scrambled along the way and turned into a seashell that hesitated to open. Black Sea was a demanding ambient record and the listener's patience surely payed off in the end. Cause the seashell, eventually, opened itself.


10. Dub Trio - Another Sound Is Dying (Ipecac)

These Newyorkers were playing Melvins' grunge/sludge, some Bad Brains core, prog and metal with a good portion of awesome dub added. It sounded so fresh and pure the word crossover sounded ugly.

The riffs were steady and the melodies present in Bay Vs. Leonard, the drummer payed homage to Dave Lombardo in Who Wants To Die?, while the dub nodders smiled to Mortar Dub, as the space echoes trailed off together with that lovely reverbed drum snare. I was getting more into dub as my brother played it more often, and Dub Trio were a great band for introducing me to it, while still adding serious portion of metal to the table.

Mike Patton not only released this album on his own Ipecac label, he also made a guest appearance on No Flag, a song so good I couldn't help myself but not thinking this was the closest thing Faith No More would sound if they ever reformed again (and they did! A year later, but didn't record anything new). Another Sound Is Dying was so healthy and natural, you could spin it over and over again. Every song had elements of something that seemed familiar, although they covered every genre so good like they invented it themselves.


11. Coldplay - Viva La Vida Or Death And All His Friends (Parlophone)

Some might see Coldplay as a bunch of slime but I loved them - every new album made me happy and somehow it were always the good periods of me life when Coldplay were releasing them.

Violet Hill was this first single that was produced by Brian Eno. Brian Eno was a master for making ambient stuff work, no matter how minimalistic it was. He helped the guys get the extra depth in the songs they needed after X&Y. The slapback kind of reverbs he put on Chris Martin's voice were sort of confusing at first, although he made a good point with those. Lovers In Japan was this huge guitar track that resembled Edge's style of playing and I loved it. It is after this song I started to dig deeper about Edge's style and U2's older records as well.

Cemeteries Of London was a darker piece that opened the album (after the delightful intro), despite the la la la verse around the chorus. Lost! was a happy one in a Coldplay-ish manner and the absolute highlight to me were Viva La Vida (a song you all probably heard of by now) and its antidote, Death And All His Friends, its insane climax (Sigur Ros influences again) and the hidden track closer The Escapist that was so dreamy and nice - I played it infinitely until I decided to set it as the alert tone / alarm ring on my mobile. I even had the tickets for a Budapest concert, I but got my damn passport only two days after the actual gig, so I couldn't go.

Coldplay were pop kings and, since the pop music got more and more disastrous every day with everything in a pop song being so goddamn synthesized (the autotune effect was once considered shameful for use), Coldplay had every right to be there on top. And they even played the actual instruments.

honorable mentions:


12. Transit - Decent Man On A Desperate Moon (Karmakosmetix)

Jan Transit, the In The Woods... singer returned with a solo album. And this one was proper good. Decent man was more indie rock oriented and had some country influences thrown in, in a Transit kind of weird way.

Ad Anima trilogy was ending the album and it was the real post-In The Woods treat. It brought back some shivers of old when Strange In Stereo and Pilgrimage albums were still fresh. Miller Song was a more straightforward piece, but a proper song and distinct voice of Jan over the Rhodes piano was enough to bring some smiles over. Bleed On Me was a nice rocker single, while The Girl And The Road reminded of Naervaer lucidity with added fuzz on top of some hollow-body guitars. Decent Man On A Desperate Moon was more than just a good listen and a clear sign that Transit still had some interesting stuff in him to share with the world.


13. Stille Opprör - S.o2 (Karmakosmetix)

Another In The Woods member, guitarist Chris Andre Cederberg, who played on Strange In Stereo and the better part of Pilgrimage (Empty RoomEpitaphKarmakosmik) finally released a solo album of his own.

The absolute highlight of this album was the self-titled S.O2 which was rerecorded again for this full length. The first version appeared on a Karmakosmetix promo sampler that came as a bonus disc with In The Woods' farewell double live album five years before this one. The promo sampler had sixteen artists / songs and the best one was Stille Oppror's track, divided into two pieces, and now put together as one single ten minute track. The guest appearance of Jan Transit on vocals added the needed atmosphere of In The Woods and this was one real post-In The Woods track that could fully bring back the vibe of the beloved band. The second part of the song reminded of Green Carnation's Light Of Day, Day Of Darkness with the acoustic guitar, saxophone and the female voice accompanying the band. S.O2 was certainly the biggest and nicest surprise of 2008.

The rest of the album was great too. Meanwhile had the ghostlike keys of Vanish In The Absence Of Virtue and Reconnect showed some gentle Anathema influences as well. The production was great, almost clinically pure and clear and every detail, experimental or not, could be heard properly. Funny enough, Danny and Vincent of Anathema would join Andre on stage two years later, with Anneke of ex-Gathering making a gueat appearance as well. Andre would play guitar with Petter Carlsen and they would support Anathema on their tour, so the experience of seeing them brought together on a single stage was overwhelmingly positive. However, Transit and Andre were active again, Kobro showed interest too, so it would be just the matter of time when the rest of the Woods clan might surprise us with the good news.


14. Mogwai - The Hawk Is Howling (Matador)

This one wasn't Mogwai's best, but it was good enough to top the rest of them. Badcat was a strong one reminiscent of Glasgow Mega-snake and its megatons of distortions. Ambient pieces were played in Scotland's ShameDanphe And The Brain and the best of them all, Local AuthorityThank You Space Expert was this gentle ballad-type, laid back piece Mogwai were masters in creating. I was lucky to see them live in Zagreb that year and managed to do an interview with the guys as well - those who speak Serbian can read it here.

It was evident that the band took a more relaxed turn by not rushing anything, experimenting with the silence thing and using the silence as another instrument as well. Their ears were surely tired of years and years of touring, thus hundreds and hundreds of decibels attacked their nerves every night. But, like I said sometime earlier, I love this band so I would always give them a go. The Hawk Is Howling was a nice one and maybe just a short break onto something more unique that would come up in future journeys of the band.