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Angels Of Darkness Demons Of Light

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Look. Before I write any further I want to go on record as being a ‘fan' of Earth. I've genuinely enjoyed their music and followed their evolution with interest and enthusiasm over the years. Psx download for pc. When they dropped so much of the out and out ‘drone' thang on ‘Pentastar', I still dug it. When they added a drummer, I still dug it, and when they went full-tilt wide-open plains dusty hat Americana I really embraced the change.

Angels And Demons Book

‘Hex' was a great record, and ‘Live Hex' really brought out a lot from that music, thanks to the trombone and keys of the fabulous Steve Moore. 2008's ‘The Bees Made Honey…' was a subtle progression with an expanded palette that really opened Earth's soundworld up…but…now we have ‘Angels Of Darkness, Demons Of Light 1' and I have to say, it does feel like a stagnation rather than a further progression.

The vinyl version of Angels Of Darkness, Demons Of Light II has the same packaging style as Angels 1. Beautiful stoughton gatefold jacket, 180 gram vinyls, etching with Stacey Rozich artwork on the 4th side. Angels of Darkness, Demons of Light Part II is the end of desert trip in the head. Once the cowboy reaches the village, all is well and good. He may have made a few slight missteps here and there, but the work he did to get there is just fine indeed. In case you didn't.

Angels Of Darkness Demons Of Light

I realise that this puts me into a minority and makes me deeply unpopular but, you know, I've had a bit of time to really get to grips with this record and I can honestly say that it bores me.

There, I've said it. Sorry folks but I find it deadly dull.

Jan 02, 2020 Answer: Darkness and light are metaphors for evil and good. If anyone sees an angel of light, it will automatically seem to be a good being, for the correlation of evil with darkness, and of good with light, is a powerful archetype in human history. In the Bible, light is a spiritual metaphor for truth and God's unchanging nature (James 1:17). Earth follow their folksy, spiritually-tinged 'Angels Of Darkness, Demons Of Light' LP with a further five tracks recorded during the same two week sessions at Seattle's Avast studios in 2011. Part II picks up the heavy-heart porchside vibes and mind-drifts through solemn, melancholy improvisations laden with a brooding tension and grit. The group's instinctive motions are evidently honed to. Earth – Angels of Darkness, Demons of Light 1 Southern Lord: 2011. As your speakers are crushed by the first riff of 'Old Black' – the opening track on Earth's latest, Angels of Darkness, Demons of Light 1 – images begin flashing across your brain. Instantly, your mind takes you back to the old West.

Darker in tone than its predecessor, with a more ‘naturalistic' feel and sound to the production and a grittier guitar tone at times, it seems that the slight changes in sonics and atmosphere are the only real differences between ‘Angels…' and the music that preceded it. New bassist Karl Blau is more prominent than previous bassists, his warm bass tones adding a nice punch to Dylan's minimalist guitar strokes, but cellist Lori Goldston is a poor alternative to the keys and trombone of Steve Moore, mostly being woefully low in the mix, hovering on the edge of hearing.

Carlson has described the music contained herein as being ‘less Wagnerian, and more Debussy-like now', which I can understand, to some extent, but to my ears it just means that any sense of overt dynamics or subtle bombast has been replaced by a more ambient approach – this album tends to just ‘happen', it drifts along in a haze. Not much really leaps out of the morass and sticks in the memory, I'm afraid.

‘Old Black' contains a very eastern-sounding wah-wah section that I find very reminiscent of latter-day Soundgarden, think the more low-key ‘psychedelic' touches on ‘Down On The Upside', and also oddly reminiscent of Sun City Girls epic ‘Ghost Ghat Pass' on their majestic imaginary-world-music opus ‘330,003 Crossdressers from Beyond The Rig Veda' – partly down to that eastern sound and partly down to the skirling cello sounds behind the guitar having a touch of Eyvind Kang to them.

‘Father Midnight' lazes along like a very sleepy river, punctuated by languid jazzy chords, and thick with warm bass. ‘Descent To The Zenith' shimmers with a coating of univibed guitar, and ‘Hells Winter' is pretty much more of the same but with the univibe turned off. The title track closes ‘Angels Of Darkness…', emerging from a miasma of womb-like bass and subtly-applied guitar, unfolding ever so slowly over twenty minutes and ultimately going nowhere. Apparently this track is mostly improvised and heralds a direction that will be carried on into ‘Angels of Darkness, Demons Of Light 2', but, it saddens me to say, I very much doubt I'll stick around to hear it.

This record plods and trudges along and basically functions as sonic wallpaper. It does not build to anything nor reach any kind of conclusion, just drifts along in a narcotised haze. I'm sure many, many people will dig it for that reason alone, but for me it does nothing. Sorry folks.

Label:Southern Lord
Website: www.myspace.com/earthofficial

Scribed by: Paul Robertson

Angels of Darkness, Demons of Light I
Studio album by
ReleasedFebruary 22, 2011
RecordedApril 2010
GenreExperimental rock, post-rock
Length60:26
LabelSouthern Lord Records
ProducerStuart Hallerman, Dylan Carlson and Adrienne Davies
Earth chronology
The Bees Made Honey in the Lion's Skull
(2008)
Angels of Darkness, Demons of Light I
(2011)
Angels of Darkness, Demons of Light II
(2012)

Angels of Darkness, Demons of Light I is the sixth full-length studio album by the band Earth, released on Southern Lord Records. Cello is introduced as a new instrument, along with the usual ones being used since the album Hex. Dylan Carlson describes the album as more melodic and riff oriented.[1] The second part of the album was released in 2012. The album illustrations were created by Stacey Rozich.[2]

Reception[edit]

Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic[3]
No Ripcord(10/10)[4]
Pitchfork(7.9/10)[5]

In the AllMusic review, Thom Jurek awarded the album 4 stars out of 5, describing the album as 'harmony and dissonance coexist[ing] without antagonism, creating a heaviness and tension that are aesthetically beautiful and emotionally resonant.'[3]Pitchfork's Grayson Currin also gave the album a positive review, stating 'In the 90s, Earth's heavy metal offered an escape, a massive shelter of volume and drone. But the intricacies of this Earth—Carlson's harmonics and harmonies, Davies' careful builds, Blau's unexpected bass maneuvers, Goldston's adventurous versatility—demand attention and immersion. That is, check in, not out, and you'll rarely hear four players with as much quiet command.'[5]

Track listing[edit]

All tracks by Earth

No.TitleLength
1.'Old Black'8:49
2.'Father Midnight'12:11
3.'Descent to the Zenith'7:30
4.'Hell's Winter'11:32
5.'Angels of Darkness, Demons of Light I'20:24
Total length:60:26

Angels Of Darkness Demons Of Light Vinyl

Angels Of Darkness Demons Of Light
Angels Of Darkness Demons Of Light

Personnel[edit]

  • Dylan Carlson — electric guitar and devices
  • Adrienne Davies — trap kit and percussives
  • Lori Goldston — cello and devices
  • Karl Blau — electric bass guitar[6]

References[edit]

Earth Angels Of Darkness Demons Of Light

Demons

Personnel[edit]

  • Dylan Carlson — electric guitar and devices
  • Adrienne Davies — trap kit and percussives
  • Lori Goldston — cello and devices
  • Karl Blau — electric bass guitar[6]

References[edit]

Earth Angels Of Darkness Demons Of Light

Earth Angels Of Darkness Demons Of Light 2

  1. ^Interview with Dylan Carlson on theskinny.co.uk
  2. ^Rozich, Stacey. Southern Lord releases Earth's newest albumArchived July 16, 2011, at the Wayback Machine
  3. ^ abThom Jurek. 'Angels Of Darkness, Demons Of Light - Earth | Songs, Reviews, Credits'. AllMusic. Retrieved 28 May 2019.
  4. ^Sean Caldwell. 'Earth: Angels Of Darkness, Demons Of Light: 1 - Music Review'. No Ripcord. Retrieved 4 June 2013.
  5. ^ abGrayson Currin (February 7, 2011). 'Angels of Darkness, Demons of Light 1 Album Review'. Pitchfork. Retrieved February 15, 2012.
  6. ^Personnel from official site

Earth Angels Of Darkness Demons Of Light Download

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