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The World Is Too Much with Us
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The World Is Too Much with Us
Current price: $14.99
Barnes and Noble
The World Is Too Much with Us
Current price: $14.99
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Though their name evokes a harmonious calm, the kind of mood that
Peace
like to work in is a lot darker than their flower child name would imply. This kind of misdirection comes into play all over the band's sophomore album,
The World Is Too Much with Us
. The sunny bounce of opener "Your Hand in Mine" sounds like
the Smiths
fronted by
Ian Curtis
, with singer
Dan Geddes
' subversively restrained performance offsetting the jangly-guitar attempt to inject a little bit of carefree fun into the song. From there, the album begins to take on a more hypnotic, vaguely menacing tone, delivering plenty of thumping, danceable tunes like "The Perp Walk" and "Fun and Games," while always giving the impression that something is just a little bit off. This kind of approach allows the Vancouver post-punk outfit to deliver on the promise of their moniker in unexpected ways, providing a peace that comes not from flower child love and togetherness, but from a trance-like pacifism that draws listeners into the intoxicating darkness with pounding rhythms and brooding atmospherics before bringing them fully under their mesmeric spell with careful repetition. What's amazing about the album is that
manages to deliver such a brooding, sometimes ominous atmosphere without ever letting the album feel oppressive, making the listener a willing participant in the pleasantly numbing experience that is
. ~ Gregory Heaney
Peace
like to work in is a lot darker than their flower child name would imply. This kind of misdirection comes into play all over the band's sophomore album,
The World Is Too Much with Us
. The sunny bounce of opener "Your Hand in Mine" sounds like
the Smiths
fronted by
Ian Curtis
, with singer
Dan Geddes
' subversively restrained performance offsetting the jangly-guitar attempt to inject a little bit of carefree fun into the song. From there, the album begins to take on a more hypnotic, vaguely menacing tone, delivering plenty of thumping, danceable tunes like "The Perp Walk" and "Fun and Games," while always giving the impression that something is just a little bit off. This kind of approach allows the Vancouver post-punk outfit to deliver on the promise of their moniker in unexpected ways, providing a peace that comes not from flower child love and togetherness, but from a trance-like pacifism that draws listeners into the intoxicating darkness with pounding rhythms and brooding atmospherics before bringing them fully under their mesmeric spell with careful repetition. What's amazing about the album is that
manages to deliver such a brooding, sometimes ominous atmosphere without ever letting the album feel oppressive, making the listener a willing participant in the pleasantly numbing experience that is
. ~ Gregory Heaney