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One Step More and You Die
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One Step More and You Die
Current price: $15.99
Barnes and Noble
One Step More and You Die
Current price: $15.99
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More structured and with a greater feel for dynamics than many Japanese
noise rock
releases,
Mono
's
One Step More and You Die
shows that
shouldn't be afraid to explore quieter sonic spaces -- in fact, the opening track,
"Where Am I,"
is downright pretty. Of course, that doesn't last long. The next track,
"Com(?),"
builds from a similarly placid opening into a climax, nearly 16 minutes later, that sounds like
Larks' Tongues in Aspic
-era
King Crimson
fed a steady diet of steroids and Red Bull, all crashing drums, clashing harmonics, and fragmented power chords. The album never quite gets to that level of ecstatic release again, but shorter tracks like
"Mopish Morning, Halation Wiper"
(which makes excellent use of an out of tune piano and guest cellist
Udai Shika
) and the slowly unfolding
"A Speeding Car"
smartly build an almost subliminal tension before quietly resolving. Akin to
Mogwai
,
Larval
, or
Sonic Youth
's more delicate moments,
is a phenomenal
instrumental rock
album. ~ Stewart Mason
noise rock
releases,
Mono
's
One Step More and You Die
shows that
shouldn't be afraid to explore quieter sonic spaces -- in fact, the opening track,
"Where Am I,"
is downright pretty. Of course, that doesn't last long. The next track,
"Com(?),"
builds from a similarly placid opening into a climax, nearly 16 minutes later, that sounds like
Larks' Tongues in Aspic
-era
King Crimson
fed a steady diet of steroids and Red Bull, all crashing drums, clashing harmonics, and fragmented power chords. The album never quite gets to that level of ecstatic release again, but shorter tracks like
"Mopish Morning, Halation Wiper"
(which makes excellent use of an out of tune piano and guest cellist
Udai Shika
) and the slowly unfolding
"A Speeding Car"
smartly build an almost subliminal tension before quietly resolving. Akin to
Mogwai
,
Larval
, or
Sonic Youth
's more delicate moments,
is a phenomenal
instrumental rock
album. ~ Stewart Mason