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Under the Pale Moon
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Under the Pale Moon
Current price: $15.99
Barnes and Noble
Under the Pale Moon
Current price: $15.99
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The full-length debut release from the
Fresh and Onlys
' guitarist following an earlier EP,
Under the Pale Moon
, finds
Wymond Miles
coming off a series of personal tragedies, aiming to create a series of songs reflecting a newfound passion and appreciation for life. The result is something that may not always seem squared away with that impulse, but such is mass culture's desire to reduce things simplistically --
is no Up with People-style production, but it isn't meant to be. Instead, the combination of crypto-goth moodiness -- nods to
Bauhaus
but especially to
Will Sergeant
's work with
Echo & the Bunnymen
are omnipresent -- and an older kind of drama, reaching back to
Phil Spector
's productions and
Roy Orbison
's mini-operas, recombines throughout on a remarkable series of songs. Something like the sharply titled "You and I Are of the Night," at once dramatic and a little wink to the audience, feels simultaneously like a late-'50s tearjerker and a reworking of that tearjerker by a band like
Modern English
, wielding a strong kick with deeper roots than expected. (Perhaps an even stronger title, a seeming irony that ultimately isn't, lies with "Youth's Lonely Wilderness," a stirring anthem in a late-'70s
David Bowie
vein that transforms into something with quieter drums than one might expect, with an unresolved, fascinating tension.) The fact that one can't draw an exact bead on many of the songs helps underscore their potential uniqueness, a kind of fusion that's
Miles
' own clear aesthetic at work rather than simply a recombination, as a song like "Singing the Ending" makes clear -- whether it's "country" or "folk" or "goth" means less than the end result. Other songs, like "Pale Moon" and "The Thirst," add to this album's overall excellence. ~ Ned Raggett
Fresh and Onlys
' guitarist following an earlier EP,
Under the Pale Moon
, finds
Wymond Miles
coming off a series of personal tragedies, aiming to create a series of songs reflecting a newfound passion and appreciation for life. The result is something that may not always seem squared away with that impulse, but such is mass culture's desire to reduce things simplistically --
is no Up with People-style production, but it isn't meant to be. Instead, the combination of crypto-goth moodiness -- nods to
Bauhaus
but especially to
Will Sergeant
's work with
Echo & the Bunnymen
are omnipresent -- and an older kind of drama, reaching back to
Phil Spector
's productions and
Roy Orbison
's mini-operas, recombines throughout on a remarkable series of songs. Something like the sharply titled "You and I Are of the Night," at once dramatic and a little wink to the audience, feels simultaneously like a late-'50s tearjerker and a reworking of that tearjerker by a band like
Modern English
, wielding a strong kick with deeper roots than expected. (Perhaps an even stronger title, a seeming irony that ultimately isn't, lies with "Youth's Lonely Wilderness," a stirring anthem in a late-'70s
David Bowie
vein that transforms into something with quieter drums than one might expect, with an unresolved, fascinating tension.) The fact that one can't draw an exact bead on many of the songs helps underscore their potential uniqueness, a kind of fusion that's
Miles
' own clear aesthetic at work rather than simply a recombination, as a song like "Singing the Ending" makes clear -- whether it's "country" or "folk" or "goth" means less than the end result. Other songs, like "Pale Moon" and "The Thirst," add to this album's overall excellence. ~ Ned Raggett