Search - New Year :: End Is Near

End Is Near
New Year
End Is Near
Genres: Alternative Rock, Pop, Rock
 
  •  Track Listings (9) - Disc #1


     
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CD Details

All Artists: New Year
Title: End Is Near
Members Wishing: 0
Total Copies: 0
Label: Touch & Go Records
Release Date: 5/18/2004
Genres: Alternative Rock, Pop, Rock
Style: Indie & Lo-Fi
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1
UPC: 036172095629

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CD Reviews

Pure Genius
Jason Nelson | Cedar Falls, Iowa United States | 05/27/2004
(5 out of 5 stars)

"These guys just can't go wrong. It's almost frightening how consistant the Kadane brothers are. 'The End Is Near' builds upon what they did in Bedhead, as well as their last New Year record. There are a few changes here, as always. This time they seem to have used some piano and even strings, along with more up-tempo songs. The result is even more beautiful than expected. The songs seem to get better the more you listen to them. It's often the little things about The New Year's songs that really make the songs special in the end, so repeated listens are recommended. Nice recording by Steve Albini.(again)
His approach seems to fit The New Year very well. Overall this is probably their best record to date. Don't miss this one."
The End is Near
05/22/2004
(4 out of 5 stars)

"If buying a Kadane/Kadane record were comparable to buying a car, you could pretty much rest assured you were getting a quality piece. The song writing is well crafted and, for the most part, solidly constructed. Or to extend the car metaphor, the songs don't come with a lot of extraneous garbage which need preening; it's all elemental (although, almost inexplicably, a couple of songs do introduce minor new elements, like acoustic guitar and even piano, I think).
There are more than a handful of songs here which would feel at home on a Bedhead record: "Disease," for instnace, crushes you with every note, and "18" is more evidence of intricate guitar work made to sound pretty simple, as is "Sinking Ship" just a good song.
The greatest departure, I think, is that the new material doesn't always pummel you in the ways which Bedhead songs did. The more upbeat passages work to homogenize the sound, and the audible vocals work against The New Year, making them come across like some kind of marginal indie rock outfit, when Bedhead seemed to transcend genre and eschew easy labels. Check out the song "Stranger to Kindness" as an example. This is clearly the worst song they've ever written, with an embarassing virtuous rant, and a horrible string arrangement at the end, evocative of total crappiness.
What's redeemable, though, is that with the audible vocal approach, you can sometimes hear subtle references to other songs, and that's dope. In "Disease" for instance, there is this imagery of "trees" which can be heard elsewhere in Bedhead songs, and "Plan B" becomes a companion piece for "Simple Life" on the "Newness Ends" record.
Another thing I like which I don't see many bands experimenting with is the package design. And while you couldn't really claim that the text or simplicity of the design is anything new, which it is not (a lot like the actual music, for better or worse), the sleeve which the CD comes in, as with the "Newness Ends" record, seems to protect the jewel case and further delay any "oldness" of the cd. Check out the subtext in reference to the titles of these two records.
So, all in all, this is really good stuff for people who remain categorically depressed, following in the tradition of Bedhead. I'm down with that."
This is the end???
altmalta | Malta | 08/29/2004
(5 out of 5 stars)

"The New Year consists of two members from the Texan slowcore band Bedhead. I assumed that this, their second release would be a continuation of that type of sound. The good thing is it isn't. I'm not saying that this is an album of terrace chants but there is a sort of jauntiness in this album (especially in `Chinese Handcuffs') that was missing from the previous band.

There is room for reflection in these tracks but some happiness glimmers through as well. I also like the fact that it is brief, to the point and doesn't meander at all. A great Sunday afternoon album.

"