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Artist: The Pax Cecilia
Album: Blessed are the Bonds (2007)
Label: Private Release
Website: http://www.paxcecilia.com
Reviewer: Bill Knispel
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Track List:
1. the Tragedy
2. the Tomb Song
3. the Progress
4. the Machine
5. the Wasteland
6. the Water Song
7. the Tree
8. the Hymn
I try not to succumb to hype.
In the past, when I have done so, the results have been, shall we say, somewhat less than impressive. I’m often left feeling empty, wondering why I thought this time it’d be
different. Hype is a cruel mistress, building up hope and expectation, only to laugh gleefully as it dashes those very things against the rocks.
Several months ago (and this says something for how deep my listening and review piles get), I saw a post on a message board mentioning a band from New York who was giving away
copies of their album to anyone who write in and asked for one. The poster raved about the release, and I heard the pumps on the hype machine priming and preparing to run.
Still, I figured, the worst that would happen is that I’d get an album that didn’t impress, without any commitment.
In the end, quite the opposite occurred.
The Pax Cecilia hails from Rochester New York (according to their Myspace page). There’s not a lot of great info out there about them from a quick and dirty search of the
net...while I have a band member list copied from the CD tray, I have no idea who plays what. In some ways, that forces the listener to focus on the efforts of the band rather
than individual instrumentalists or vocalists. It’s an interesting direction to take, and it does actually work well for the material on Blessed are the Bonds,,
the band’s second album.
Mournful piano and sorrowful cello lead the listener on the beginning of the journey with the album’s first track, “The Tragedy.” This is an incredibly moody piece, relatively
restrained, and with a sound that really defies easy comparison. I could say I hear elements of Radiohead and Tool, but I’m not sure either of those comparisons is a good one,
or even especially valid. This track is nicely orchestrated, with live strings courtesy of The Canzonetta Trio, with layered, harmonized vocals, ornate piano, and insistent
drumming that adds urgency and insistence to the mix. It elicits emotional response...the hairs on my arm raised, my eyes began to mist up, and I was as committed to listening
to this as the band was in getting it down to be heard. Brilliant album opener, this...and it did a great job in assuaging any fears that I would again be the victim of
hype.
The somewhat restrained mood continues on “The Tomb Song,” which again opens with lyrical, fluid piano lines. Wind noises can be heard briefly before the vocals come in,
sounding eerie, distant, detached and disaffected. Long sustained vocal notes sound like mourner’s wails. Again, we have strings, doubled by slashing single guitar chords as
the band builds toward the first of several mini-climaxes within the composition. The short electric guitar melodic figures are sweet, adding some texture and power to an
already powerful piece. I will admit that the yelled vocals around 4:20 in don’t fully convince, and sound a little ragged, but I’m willing to accept them as necessary for the
mood of the piece. The Pax Cecilia works through a number of musical phrases, building, tearing down, and building again in strange and interesting ways. The lengthy
composition allows for this, yet its length does not define the song.
“The Progress” arises from an extended burst of feedback, and all pretense of quiet and restraint is gone. This is a full on metal assault through the opening stages, amazingly
intense, with strings still soaring over thrash metal chording and powerhouse drumming. Vocals are again screamed versus sung, and the screaming works better here over the
intense musical backing the band has crafted. Much like previous tracks, the band is not content to stay within a single musical style, tempting stagnation. Guitars are pulled
back, leaving space for drums and bass, as the vocalist begins to rant with completely unrestrained passion and emotion. I don’t need to understand what he’s saying (and it’s a
little tough from time to time, to be honest)...I again respond to the unfettered emotion of what he’s doing. This heaviness is continued on the following album track, the short
and lyrically light “The Machine,” adding in more chopped, shifting rhythms and veering closer to progressive metal than post-metal or post-rock.
“The Wasteland” matches in title and sound, with a sparse ambient soundscape creating the aural image of a vast and abandoned wasteland, wind noises broken up by brief piano
chords and tones that could be synthesizer or processed vocals...it’s hard to say. The unsettling quiet crosses over to the epic “The Water Song,” a piece that builds in
intensity toward a fully metallic, explosive conclusion. The Pax Cecilia’s material is always changing, often within the space of a single song, and it is this element that
makes their material so enjoyable to listen to. Each composition is a journey, taking the listener from point A to point B...but not necessarily and not always in a straight
line. The journey is often dark and emotionally fraught; it’s not always easy listening, but it is rewarding listening.
The band’s penchant for complexity and interesting playing is heard to good effect on the instrumental “The Tree,” built around a lyrical and melodic bass line with quiet drum
accompaniment. Guitars first sound odd, almost like slightly distorted and flanged violins, but the return of strings to a prominent aural focal point puts paid to that idea
quickly. It’s an impressive instrumental, with the focus much more on developing the mood and moving the song than on showing off. In fact, much the same could be said for the
material on the entire album; the song and mood come first always. This results in a sound that is consistent even as styles shift from track to track, or within each
song.
The album ends as it began, with the plaintive “The Hymn.” Acoustic guitars dominate, with fragile, barely heard vocals. For an album that has traversed some amazing heights of
intensity and power, it may seem an odd choice to close things out so quietly. But it works. It’s appropriate. It’s right. I don’t know that a more appropriate choice could
have been made, to be honest. It shows the confidence the band has in this material that they are willing to pick a less heavy piece to close out this release, feeling certain
that it is the right artistic choice.
I have to say I find it somewhat amazing that the Pax Cecilia is giving this music away...and beyond that, that there’s been so much care taken in packaging (the CD itself is
gorgeous, with evocative artwork, surreal lyric booklet, and poster packed in). Blessed are the Bonds really is an impressive package, and the material shows a
band willing to bear the slings and arrows of being labeled “pretentious” in order to follow their collective muse. The Pax Cecilia is one of the more impressive post rock/post
metal/’noise’ bands I have heard in some time, and Blessed are the Bonds is an album that will reward the patient listener with an amazing aural trip.
Band Members:
Greg Austin
Daniel James
John Feustel
Slade Lellock
Kent Fairman Wilson
Strings performed by The Canzonetta Trio: Giovanni Crooks, Kristen Sambolin, Siobahn Fleming
Additional Performers:
D. James Goodwin: vocals
Harold “Harlo” Taddy: vocals
Dutch Pearce: vocals
Emma Maatman: vocals
Justin Dudley: vocals
Amylynn Weiland: vocals
William “Agent” James - trombone
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