All Fall Down

All Fall Down

by The Sound
All Fall Down

All Fall Down

by The Sound

CD

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Overview

Label: "The five-star reviews were nice and all, so how about some actual hits this time -- eh, fellas?" Band: "Right." The fellas responded with no hits, which had a lot more to do with defiance than closed-minded radio programming -- there was no attempt at making a hit. There's nothing like Jeopardy's blasting "Heartland," and there certainly isn't anything as instantly pleasurable as From the Lion's Mouth's "Sense of Purpose." In fact, the Sound responded to label demands and simmering internal pressures with a record that challenged devout fans as well. All Fall Down is one of those maligned records where some fans bailed but a select few would be inclined to attempt -- through demonstrative hand gestures and longwinded, shouty, pouty explanations of the circumstances surrounding it -- why it's the band's greatest achievement. All this despite the fact that the majority of the other people who have heard it will tell you it should be avoided at all costs. "It's hopelessly 'down,' it's got no 'tunes,' it doesn't go anywhere," etc. Truthfully, it falls somewhere between those two views. This is one of those records where patience pays off, because it will gradually become more apparent that the songs all fit together and pretzel themselves in a sense that each one's effect is optimized with the context of those surrounding it. It's not a sprawl of songs but an album. Nothing comes by and smacks you in the face; its progression unfolds slowly. They play around with song structures, avoid choruses, drop down unexpected portals, use rhythmic drives for extended stretches, and employ chanted refrains, tape effects, and mechanized handclaps. Some songs build and build and build on a slight gradient and fade out or disappear with no resolution, no catharsis. None of these developments emaciate the band's power. However difficult the record is to crawl into, it shows a band that had reached another level of mastery. [Renascent reissued All Fall Down in 2002 with superb sound and added three previously unreleased songs. The vocal tracks seem to be slowed down significantly, making Adrian Borland sound very intimidating.] ~ Andy Kellman

Product Details

Release Date: 02/19/2013
Label: 1972
UPC: 0852545003547
Rank: 105204

Tracks

  1. All Fall Down
  2. Party of the Mind
  3. Monument
  4. In Suspense
  5. Where the Love is
  6. Song and Dance
  7. Calling the New Tune
  8. Red Paint
  9. Glass and Smoke
  10. We Could Go Far

Album Credits

Performance Credits

The Sound   Primary Artist
Adrian Borland   Guitar,Vocals
Mike Dudley   Percussion,Drums
Graham Green   Bass,Drum Machine
Max Mayers   Keyboards
Manor Choir   Vocals (Background)

Technical Credits

Craig Milliner   Engineer
Mayers   Composer
Nick Robbins   Producer
Andrew Douglas   Photography
Adrian Borland   Composer,Lyricist
Graham Bailey   Composer
Adrian Janes   Composer,Lyricist
Michael Dudley   Composer
Steve Prestage   Engineer
Max Mayers   Composer
Bill Smith   Design
The Sound   Producer
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