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10 out of 12 He Has Left Us Alone But Shafts of Light Sometimes Grace the Corner of Our Rooms cover

A Silver Mt. Zion - He Has Left Us Alone But Shafts of Light Sometimes Grace the Corner of Our Rooms
(Constellation)

The goal is to get through this review without resorting to cheap comparisons to Godspeed, You Black Emperor!, the legion of musicians from which the three who comprise A Silver Mt. Zion are culled. I fully expect to fail, and to fail quickly.

The problem with avoiding comparisons, really, is in the opening track. Actually, the problem appears first in the external qualities of the tracks themselves. There are so many questions: how many tracks are there? Two? Two with eight sub-tracks? Eight? One? Who the hell knows? And why do the time lengths listed on the inside cover not correspond with the readout on the cd player. Are they trying to trick me? Are they laughing at me right now? And what the hell is a silver Mt. Zion and who has left us alone? Its just too damned arty-farty to figure out.

Anyway, the first segment of music is a simple and plaintive piano piece, which, as the melody cycles, becomes louder and more complex. Then you have a recorded radio voice reciting and expositing on Bible versus, layered on top of itself, which is finally combined with a mournful violin. What is the difference between this and GYBE? Well, there are about one thousand less musicians in A Silver Mt. Zion. That's about all I have come up with so far.

Then you have the second chunk of music, which drops the voice and piano, but picks up some drums to propel the violin melody out of the mournful and into a more impassioned tempo. The repetition, the slow burn, the scaling up of intensity never quite reaches the fevered pitch of ecstasy and madness which makes GBYE so cathartic (maybe that's the difference, A Silver Mt. Zion is the laidback version of GBYE). Its subtler but retains the passion.

The remainder of the album essentially follows this same pattern. That is not to say the songs are necessarily repetitious of each other or to accuse the musicians of being proverbial "one-trick ponies." But, as with GYBE, each record seems to be comprised of one big, unified piece (no matter how many crazily named segments they try and trick me into thinking there are). Thus, there is a unifying strand, originating in the first segment, which weaves its way through the two songs or eight tracks or forty-seven minutes of this record. To keep things fresh, organs, upright bass, and guitar are all thrown into the mix.

Structurally, the album is as interesting as it is musically. The first half builds towards a crescendo but is cut short by the fourth track, a bizarre piano ballad, sung in a pained voice, which resets the intensity meter for the remainder of the album. The minor psychosis of the first half of the album breaks and gives way to a sadness captured perfectly in the piano, violin, bowed upright bass combination on the final track.

Like other releases that these musicians have contributed to in GYBE, He Has Left Us . . . is a fascinating piece of music produced by a talented group of artists who deserve to sell millions of records. So get to work, people!

dave christensen
2000 may 4

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