Music

The Silent Years

The Globe
(Defend Music)
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Reviewed by Vadim Rizov
August 12th, 2008

"Pay It Back" by The Silent Years

The Silent Years' third album is perplexing, but reasonably so. The Detroit-based group makes songs with all the frills: emotive string sections, jaunty brass, the occasional majestic organ, all filling out multi-part songs that wouldn't know how to draw a straight line with a ruler and graph paper. "Pay It Back," the disc's best, blows a climax less than halfway in: The harps soar, the trumpets march, and suddenly everything peters out. "Don't you think that it's yours because maybe it belongs to everyone," Josh Epstein repeats over and over as all the sections vamp, steadily diminishing in volume until nothing's left. It's a perverse way to build a song, eminently representative of how The Silent Years work: Opener "Out Into The Wild" leaves listeners there, somewhere in a murk of looped keyboards and wordless vocals. The whole album's busy with lively sounds and background noise, and it's hard to argue with the intelligence of what's going on moment-to-moment, but it never adds up. These aren't fragments; they're incomplete arcs.

A.V. Club Rating: B-

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