Swansaw- Flight and Falling (free album download!)

Discussion on new albums, developing listening skills, critical listening to others' work, as well as TOMB members' MP3 links, online recording critiques

Moderator: cgarges

Post Reply
JEvensen
audio school graduate
Posts: 16
Joined: Mon May 26, 2008 6:34 pm
Location: music
Contact:

Swansaw- Flight and Falling (free album download!)

Post by JEvensen » Thu Feb 19, 2009 9:11 pm

Image

Swansaw is Josh Evensen and Matt Olsson. josh is a guy who was writing some songs and thought they were cool so he was looking for a drummer and he remembered that matt was a drummer who played some beats that were pretty cool and seemed pretty cool so josh got in touch with matt. and they jammed. and it was pretty cool. josh showed matt his songs and matt said they were pretty cool. and they jammed and jammed and jammed. and out of this jamming came a more expansive album concept and better arrangements and even some more songs collaboratively written. and it was pretty cool.

They have an album.

It's called Flight and Falling, and was forged in the basement of the fabulous Evensen complex. Only the finest preamps and kinetic recording devices were used-- primarily a tape machine they call David. He is about the size of one New York City block. David is powered by the purest coal. All instruments and equipment used on this album, excluding Josh's amp, were at minimum 50 years old at the time of its creation. Josh's amp is brand new and solid state and he hates it.

a new album called ************** is also being written. all of the things that remained to be done two paragraphs ago remain undone still, but courage! courage! big plans may be piling up higher by the minute, but swansaw are men. swansaw are powerful men with powerful powers.

so things will turn out pretty cool.
download page

User avatar
Woodeye
pluggin' in mics
Posts: 37
Joined: Fri Mar 23, 2007 7:07 pm
Location: Holt, MI

Post by Woodeye » Tue Feb 24, 2009 12:49 pm

I'm not sure if you just caught me in the right mood or what, but I'm enjoying this. I love the space this sits in, and while I'm not listening in the most optimum of environments at the moment, it all seems to go together very well; nice mix, groovy spacious tones, cool arrangements, yeah!

Oh, and thanks for the free music! I'll get off my rear one of these days and reciprocate with something I've recently recorded that I think you might appreciate.
-- There are 10 kinds of people in the world - those who understand binary, and those who don't --

JEvensen
audio school graduate
Posts: 16
Joined: Mon May 26, 2008 6:34 pm
Location: music
Contact:

Post by JEvensen » Thu Mar 05, 2009 9:58 am

Shucks man, glad you dig. I appreciate that you specifically like the arrangements-- we spent sooo much time working all of that out.

And yeah, definitely send me a link to anything you'd like. josh@joshuaevensen.com .

User avatar
texlop
pushin' record
Posts: 292
Joined: Fri Feb 27, 2004 2:38 am

sounds great

Post by texlop » Sun Mar 08, 2009 7:03 pm

beautiful, ambient, it has like a sigur ros feel to it. I like it. Good job
For some good new music check out The Medusas

listen to some of their Mp3's at Pure Volume

JEvensen
audio school graduate
Posts: 16
Joined: Mon May 26, 2008 6:34 pm
Location: music
Contact:

Post by JEvensen » Sun Mar 22, 2009 7:33 am

thanks duke.

Image
Image
Image
Image
Image

just updating you guys with a look at some sweet packaging in case anyones interested.

they are primarily for shows but if anybody actually wants a physical copy I could potentially set you up with one somehow-- probably for something to the tune of $5 + s&h. or if you live in nyc I could probably meet you.

doubtful that anyone wants one, but they sure look cool eh?

JEvensen
audio school graduate
Posts: 16
Joined: Mon May 26, 2008 6:34 pm
Location: music
Contact:

Post by JEvensen » Tue Mar 31, 2009 4:28 pm

the silent ballet wrote:Score: 6/10

About a year and a half ago, I reviewed a collection of B-Sides by an artist known as Ryan Farish, whom I panned rather thoroughly. Although Farish?s music was marred by numerous technical problems (unoriginality, blandness, etc.), the far more serious issue was insincerity, which was present on a truly grandiose level. It was plainly obvious that Farish?s faux-new-age-and-world stylings were an attempt to capitalize on the worst stereotypes of what he thought people would probably want to hear, rather than an honest expression of his soul. In retrospect, it is not at all surprising that Farish composes music for the Weather Channel.

Today?s album, however, is of a markedly different approach. That is to say, where Farish?s album gave us ?emotion like a marionette: limp and devoid of feeling, yet manipulated to create a false impression of life,? Swansaw?s Flight and Falling drips sincerity out of every pore. As near as I can tell, Swansaw is a fairly young band, and accordingly they display a youthful exuberance that is delightfully refreshing. But how far can honesty carry you? Is it enough to care about your music with every fiber of your being, or is more required? Unfortunately, as all too many high school bands have discovered, it is not, but it is a nice start.

Which is not to say that this is a terrible album; far from it, as the score assigned indicates (remember, six and above indicates a record that is ?good?). The problem is that Swansaw are not terribly creative, and their songs often head towards repetitiveness, even before they end. Although they list many of the post-rock stalwarts (Explosions in the Sky, Ef, etc.) as their influences, they also make mention of Led Zeppelin, and their general sound is more similar to standard rock, albeit with a trend towards the instrumental and occasionally even the atmospheric.

They aren?t entirely instrumental, however, and their vocalist Josh (the band only gives first names) is really to be praised for his work on Flight and Falling. In ?havenot?, the second track, Josh delivers an energetic and powerful performance that reminds me of all the good aspects of early Against Me! songs - on the chorus of ?We Laugh at Danger (and Break All the Rules)? in particular. His vocals are front and center, and when the song switches gears from ambient to rockin? and Josh begins wailing away, the absolute passion and sincerity which Swansaw pour into their music becomes quite palpable. Elsewhere, such as in ?whispering,? the vocals are buried into the mix and presented in a shoegazey style that works quite well with the music. These are two rather different styles of singing, and it speaks quite well for Josh that he is able to pull off both of them, as well as for the production, that it is able to support him so ably.

Structurally, the band still has some issues to work through. The aforementioned ?havenot? features a brilliant first half, and for just over four and a half minutes the song chugs along quite nicely. However, there?s still another five minutes to go, and here Swansaw missteps. They switch into a quiet interlude which does not quite manage to hold the listener?s attention. Although going from a loud section to a long quiet portion is a standard trick of the trade in instrumental music?I think Godspeed You! Black Emperor might have done that once or twice?Swansaw doesn?t really capitalize on the rest they offer the listener here, and when the begin building it back up two minutes later, they never manage to eclipse the first half, and we begin to wonder why we bothered to keep listening after the 4:30 mark.

Flight and Falling is far too inconsistent to be considered a ?great? album. But there are certain shining moments on display here, which make me think that, with a little retooling, Swansaw could yet hit that mark. Unfortunately, that very same sincerity that makes their music such a joy to listen to in its current stage could perhaps be holding them back, by not allowing Swansaw to critically engage with its own music. After all, its hard to be objective with things you love, and it is clear that Swansaw loves its music like a child. I would bet that this band is great in a live setting, but to really shine in a recorded format, Swansaw will probably need to try to distance itself from its music, at least a little bit. Issues of structure should be paid particular attention. However, when their music really hits its stride, such as in the first half of ?havenot?, in the latter half of ?abraham?s ashes?, or in many places throughout the two-song suite of ?the math? and ?the aftermath?, Swansaw imbues the listener with a sense of absolute glee as the screaming guitars and pounding drums wash over them. Wherever Swansaw goes from here, I would wish that they always retain that element of their music.

-Tom Butcher
http://www.thesilentballet.com/dnn/Revi ... fault.aspx

Post Reply

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 59 guests