Sunday, November 3, 2013

thee silver mountain reveries - pretty little lightning paw


Collector's Item

in hindsight, this ep comes off as a sort of an experiment. the mt zions have repeatedly indicated a sort of boredom with post-rock and have been trying to get out of it for quite a while. in the end, they seem to always go back to it. on a level, they're sort of stuck. i can plead guilty to keeping them stuck there, but it's not out of an aversion to them trying something different so much as the directions they keep going in. like, start a punk band. i'd dig that. they seem to like punk. there are a lot of reasons to think they'd be very interesting if they went in a sort of hafler trio direction, or even flat-out industrial noise. but, the delves into generic folk and corporate rock have left me unsatisfied, even as i rant about how boring and generic that post-rock has become.

obviously, i'm suggesting less commercial turns of direction than they've actually taken and that contrast sort of colours my reaction. the experiments here are sort of floundering; a few of them come off fairly well, but even the more interesting sections are marred by a sort of contrivedness. see, it's sort of obvious that they're trying to piggyback on what radiohead was doing at the time. well, the shift is too dramatically obvious to suggest anything else. they were generating a lot of interest in the radiohead community. this is a deduction, but it's obvious. that's not to say that the ep sounds like radiohead so much as it is to suggest that it seems like it was constructed to appeal to radiohead fans - a subtle, but very significant distinction. or simply influenced by? no, not this band.

so, here is the reality, bluntly, after many years of contemplation: when a collective that built itself up on it's ability to channel raw emotion all of a sudden moves to something that is cerebrally calculated, the contrast is so clear that it cannot be missed. it denies the act of the precise, exact quality that generated interest amongst fans, rendering them almost obsolete.

what happens with the next few mt zion discs, though, is a sort of a struggle between the real and emotional and the calculated and dour that swings back and forth rather wildly, creating highly erratic results. for this disc?

the first track is some kind of homage to do make say think, or broken social scene, or something like that. on some level it seems tongue in cheek, but the sad thing is that it seems to miss it's own irony. it comes off more as a parody than anything else, but due to the way it's presented in it's introduction it seems more like a parody of themselves. the second track moves into the aforementioned post kid a territory, rooting itself in an awkwardly dour and heavily reverberated loop that seems to go on forever before it breaks up into a wash of noise - a neat track in theory, but the emotion is missing. something similar could be said of the third track. lyrically, the explorations are of paranoia and freedom, themes that are actually shared between radiohead and the gybe/zion collective. however, they have a distinctly mundane quality that could be arguably labeled as "annoying".

the last track is a real treat, though. some kind of johnny cash type thing; the band may have been thinking of freak folk as a way to break the monotony of being a post-rock band, and while they would explore folk further they never produced anything remotely approaching this. there's a continuity in the heavy reverb from the previous two tracks, but what separates it from the rest of the disc is that it feels real in it's resignation and passive hope.

as this is a collection of mostly failed experiments, i'm labeling it a collector's item and sticking to it. however, it's probably the band's most accessible work. the caveat is that it isn't at all similar to any of their other records.

stream:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GaJpJ9OX0zs&list=PLnpQFjefXCRMI_cUh5536j-nMfLVicRQ_

http://dghjdfsghkrdghdgja.appspot.com/categories/music/artists/ASilverMtZion/2004-PrettyLittleLightningPaw/index.html

timeline: 2004

previous next
2004

jan 25: a silver mt zion @ the black sheep, wakefield
apr 16: tortoise, four tet @ capital city music hall, ottawa
may 10: thee silver mountain reveries - pretty little mountain paw
june 10: ember swift, jane siberry @ westfest, ottawa
aug 6: sonic youth @ capital city music hall, ottawa
aug 26: broken social scene, ember swift @ folk festival, ottawa

http://dghjdfsghkrdghdgja.appspot.com/chronology/CE/2000/000/00/04.html
i wish you could hear how good these phones sound, though....

....i just compared them to a newer model of sennheisers i got last year and they're just not on the same level...

when i put the 440-IIs back on, all i could think was "why did i ever take them off?".

it was like taking a pair of ear plugs out.

like switching from grey-scale to colour.

like walking out of the city and taking a breathe of fresh air...

like, the way they're able to separate the fuzz guitar in the middle section of mountains made of steam so that it's directly harmonic to the guitar part is...it's almost impossible, really....there's *no* blur....

and, then when the bow comes in, i can clearly hear the buzz on the fucking string. spectacular!

i'm wondering if the model name is a coincidence or a hint.

something about these sennheisers, though, is that they don't have those big muffy ear pieces - and that's an asset, as i find they muffle. all the new phones come with all this noise cancelling stuff that fucks with the signal. no. i want clear, crisp, perfect reproduction...

about five or six years ago, i picked up a pair with some funny digital processing in them that reduces more or less to a boost on the high and low; it was meant to compensate for mp3 compression, and it did give the sound a nice boost through an mp3 player. but, they were impossible for mastering. that's what i'm trying to avoid.

but the market has changed. back in the 80s and 90s, people bought high-end headphones to listen to record player and cd player signals through high end amps. so the focus was on reproducing the signal exactly. that's sort of rare nowadays; the market now is for mp3 players, laptops, djs...

...and because the sources suck, the phones companies have come up with all these digital tricks to try and make their product sound better. basic reproduction is a niche market, now.

sent to sennheiser support (via online form)

sent to sennheiser support:

hi.

i've had a pair of hd 440-II's for about twenty years now. that's two thirds of my life. these 440-II's have followed me everywhere - from bus rides to high school in the 90s with a cassette player right into recording studios for mastering processes. every piece of music i've ever connected to or created has been heard through these phones.

after 20 years, they're getting a little shorted, and i feel it's time to replace them.

i would like to replace them with another set of 440-IIs. otherwise, the world would just sound entirely different. better specs, worse specs - it wouldn't matter. my recordings would all sound wrong; my favourite records would become alien. my universe would just implode in on itself...

yet, they appear to be discontinued. i am very distraught by this thought.

and, so, i have two questions:

1) do you have any hd 440-iis sitting around somewhere?
2) if not, what is the closest model?

if you end up answering (2), i would like to request that you take the time to run the question by some engineers that can answer it properly, rather than try and sell me on something. i'm not looking for the phones with the best specs, or the cheapest phones or any other such thing - i am looking for phones that can replace the 440-ii's with the least amount of variance.

thank you,
jessica
why does this model of headphones have to be discontinued? FUCK.

they're still kicking, somehow. but, they're dying a slow death and i need to replace them. i really, really, really want to replace them with the same model. even if i get something with drastically better specs, it's going to sound different, and it's going to throw me for a loop. these are literally the only headphones i've ever had to record with.

any headphone geeks out there reading this? suggestions for something that sounds similar? anybody happen to even have a pair?

sennheiser hd-440 IIs.


guess i'll look on ebay. but if you have a pair or know somebody that does....