Dirty Three
http://www.dirtythree.com
styles: post-rock, melancholy instrumental, dirge
others: GY!BE, Hangedup, Rachel's, Mogwai, June of 44
Cinder
Touch & Go, 2005
rating: 3.5/5
reviewer: tamec
It's been ten years since Dirty Three released their self-titled Touch & Go
debut (and second proper record). Their popularity has waxed and waned in the
past decade, generally with the fortunes of their instrumental post-rock genre
itself. The band toured with Godspeed You! Black Emperor at the height of the
latter band's popularity, and while their pretty, melancholy violin dirges have
rarely approached Godspeed's structural sophistication, fans of the combo
realize that the band's name belies their aesthetic. I don't know exactly what "shambolic"
means, but I'm pretty sure it describes what happens when you put Warren Ellis's
violin, Mick Turner's guitar, and Jim White's drums together. The three have
performed as part fellow Aussie Nick Cave's band, but on their own the Dirty
Three capture something entirely their own.
Seven proper albums, a movie soundtrack, and a few odd EPs into their career,
fans wouldn't be amiss to wonder where the band has left to head. The band's
first few albums, including 1996's Horse Stories, considered by many the
band's best record, were full of long, sweltering compositions that worked
themselves up to powerful, discordant frenzies of noise. Ocean Songs
found the band at their most pastoral, and Whatever You Love, You Are saw
experimentation with fuller, multi-tracked, melodic violin-centered
compositions. Cinder is similar to the band's most recent effort, She
Has No Strings Apollo, in that it splits the difference between the band's
languid side and their louder material. There are a few differences, however,
that make Cinder worth a listen even for those who feel they've had their
fill of the 3.
The first difference fans will notice when picking up Cinder is the song
lengths. After putting together several albums with less than ten songs (usually
upwards of six or seven minutes apiece), Cinder's 19-song tracklist is a
striking departure for the band. Perhaps they've decided that they don't need
nine minutes to make the same statements they can make in three; there's much
less repetition on Cinder than on any of the band's other records. But
"Ever Since" and "Amy" are reminiscent of the band's softer side, driven by
pretty guitar lines and shuffled along by Jim White's trademark brushed drums...
nice enough, but, really, just more of the same. The record's title track, with
its repetitive string scraping, is the band at their least engaging – it nearly
puts the listener to sleep, until you get a load of the next song, "Doris." For
the first time (to my knowledge), Dirty Three actually rock, cottoning to a
distorted guitar riff that carries a concise little three and a half minute
stomper. Elsewhere, "Great Waves" is co-written and sung by Cat Power's Chan
Marshall, and her voice seems such a natural complement to Ellis's violin that
one wonders that she hasn't been the band all along.
No more really need be said about Cinders. It's Dirty Three as they've
always been, testing their limits, but still producing some of the prettiest and
most artful music around. And for the unfamiliar, Cinders isn't a bad
place to start.
1. Ever Since
2. She Passed Through
3. Amy
4. Sad Sexy
5. Cinders
6. Doris
7. Flutter
8. The Zither Player
9. It Happened
10.Great Waves
11. Dream Evie
12. Too Soon, Too Late
13. This Night
14. Rain On
15. Ember
16. Michele
17. Feral
18. Last Dance
19. In Fall
Horse Stories
Touch and Go, 1996
rating: 4.5/5
reviewer: tamec
Oh, instrumental music. It's undergoing a rebirth in the indie scene, thankfully, and this is prime time to jump on the bandwagon. You've got your
GYBE!, you've got your Mogwai, and you've got the Dirty Three. Incidentally, none of these are American bands. Dirty Three hail from Australia, and are
"in good" with fellow Aussie Nick Cave; they've been playing in his band on the most recent tour.
Not surprisingly, D3 is a three piece: guitar, violin, and drums. Warren Ellis' violin is the centerpiece and carries the nine songs on
Horse Stories. While I haven't heard the entirety of the band's catalog, this release is their most critically-acclaimed, and comes highly recommended from this reviewer as well. "Hope" is a beautiful track, summing up its title perfectly, while "At the Bar" does the same for its moniker. The band even shows some versatility, with the jumbled, noisy, distorted "Red", and injects some vocal color into the lovely "Horse". All in all, fans of weeping, quasi-painful instrumental rock (and most importantly, the violin), should definitely give this album a listen.
1. 1000 Miles
2. Sue's Last Ride
3. Hope
4. I Remember A Time When You Used To Love Me
5. At The Bar
6. Red
7. Warren's Lament
8. Horse
9. I Knew It Would Come To This

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