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Orbit Service - Songs of Eta Carinae https://www.metalreviews.com/phpBB/viewtopic.php?f=9&t=6942 |
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Author: | noodles [ Wed Jul 26, 2006 12:04 am ] |
Post subject: | Orbit Service - Songs of Eta Carinae |
They're a Pink Floyd/Radiohead influenced space rock band that kelsey introduced me too today. They're amazingly relaxing and atmospheric and I recommend them... I could listen to the guitar on "Bruises" for hours on end... listen: http://myspace.com/orbitservice allmusicgguide review: Quote: Songs of Eta Carinae fulfills several of the promises held by Orbit Service's previous effort, Twilight. The album is darker, tighter, better written. Simply said, it hits harder in the solar plexus. Paradoxically, the group manages to push its music farther into space while putting some distance between it and Pink Floyd's, still the main reference point here. Randall Frazier's voice evokes Roger Waters, no doubt about it, and there are a few musical moments that come extremely close to the mighty Floyd, "Halos" being the main offender here -- a good song, but too derivative. Songs of Eta Carinae begins with "Wolves," a track more powerful than anything found on Twilight. Frazier is recounting a dream he had; he ends up screaming about wolves over a stark, menacing background. Pink Floyd and Radiohead (another frequent point of comparison) never had such stripped-down arrangements, and that is where Orbit Service's music becomes infectious: those precise drum beats, judicious guitar arrangements, and all-around sober instrumental developments -- a rarity in psychedelic or space rock. With its twangy lead guitar, "Bruises" almost hints at Calexico's first albums, without actually stepping out of Orbit Service's persona. Besides "Wolves," highlights include "The Truth Eludes Me," "A Hallucination," and the riveting "No Longer We Dream," in which Waters' influence resurfaces with a vengeance. This band is in a class of its own, where the more sociopathic side of Pink Floyd meets the twisted musical imagery of the Legendary Pink Dots and Edward Ka-Spel, as unlikely as it seems. Emotionally draining and highly recommended.
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Author: | Goat [ Thu Jul 27, 2006 5:13 pm ] |
Post subject: | |
Not bad at all, although nothing earth-shaking. Nice find, Jeff. |
Author: | noodles [ Mon Jul 31, 2006 2:35 am ] |
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they go a tad overboard with the sparsity of their music I guess, but otherwise I love it. Its been in my CD player for the last week just because its great to fall asleep to. |
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