
‘The Dark Is Rising’ is the first track on the album, and it’s essentially the album in miniature. Sweeping strings, piano chords, and a falsetto voice that really only a mother could love. Jonathan Donahue, the band’s vocalist has one of those voices destined for cult appeal. It’s not bad, exactly, but it certainly isn’t to everyone’s taste. You need to like your singers with a bit of individuality.
The falsetto is very evident in the first few tracks, coming to the fore in both ‘Chains’ and ‘Lincoln’s Eyes’. The latter of these two tracks is perhaps the defining moment of the album, in that you could very easily hate it. If you enjoy ‘Lincoln’s Eyes’, you’ll like the rest of the album – simple. ‘Nite and Fog’, which follows it, is a perhaps necessary concession to writing a normal song – it even has a chorus. It also sounds effortlessly constructed – as if the band have thrown it into the record just to prove that they can.
The rest of the album is a fascinating, and at times, bewildering collection of soundscapes. ‘Tides Of The Moon’ drifts in and out like an excerpt from a song that never ends. ‘A Drop In Time’ sounds like a lullaby from a world of magic, ‘Spiders And Flies’ is a sad piano ballad about, apparently, flies and spiders, and ‘Hercules’ is a textbook example of how to build a song from nothing into a towering column of noise.
‘All Is Dream’ is not a conventional indie record. It’s aptly titled, and it genuinely feels like it occupies some strange position somewhere between sleep and wakefulness. It is, however, not quite like any other record, and that’s reason enough to listen to it.
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