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Red Tree

Moneen

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Album Review

For Moneen's third full-length, the guys start with a bang and end with a whisper. Quietly perfecting an invigorating mix of emo (à la the Get Up Kids) and math rock since their 1999 debut EP, The Red Tree brings more textured backdrops of up-and-down dynamics complete with crashing guitars, ringing vocals, and mid-song drop-offs into piano bits or soft lyrics that fans have come to love. The six-minute "The Day No One Needed to Know" shows this recipe perfectly, as it fades near the halfway point, leaving vocalist Kenny Bridges singing alone, until the song — yup — kicks back in for an exuberant ending. The album starts in high gear with the opening track's hyperactive drums rolls and layered vocal harmonies, which eventually spill over into a supporting backbone of frenzied guitar. Without pausing for breath, the second and third songs follow suit. However, this brisk opening trifecta isn't especially distinctive, with each track mostly relying on the same animated formula of pent-up energy bursting around upfront vocal harmonies. Further into the album, songs become more of the up-and-down, fast-slow-fast variety, as Moneen play tight and harmonize with ease. The gentleness of "This Is All Bigger Than Me" is a definite standout (and not just for its concise title), while the surging "The Frightening Reality..." benefits from engaging riffs. The final two tracks are more fully developed ballads that escape the usual build-up of the rest of the album, but "There Are a Million Reasons..." somewhat has the feeling of being the requisite slow song for a band like the Used that the delicate "The Song I Swore to Never Sing" thankfully evades. It's always nice to see a band attempt to step outside the boundaries constraining so many other groups of the emo new school, and Moneen seem to consistently separate themselves from the pack in this way. The Red Tree is another capable release to add to their others, but the time might be appropriate for an expansion on their own formula to occur.

Customer Reviews

Moneen, How you've grown

Now if your already a fan of moneen then you already own this album. If not Buy this Album! But I have to say it was a shift, almost a huge shift for our little neeners. Some of their playfulness still exists but all in all I would have to say moneen has grown up. Buy this Album! Every song is an epic, an anthem, a rock the F*** out kinda song. but I would have to say with that epic feel the songs have gained a more straightforward approach, whereas previous albums if you didnt have a solid stompin foot you might get lost in their playing style, but now even the musicaly inept can keep up with the new motunes. Buy this album! I guess I miss some of the more eclectic, or ecentric riffs of previous moneen albums...but thats why I own those albums...So go forth moneen write and be awsome and people will BUY THIS ALBUM!

Part 1

When I buy a new album - especially one that I haven't heard much of, or any at all - I give it a few listens (usually in a cycle with the three or four other albums I compulsively bought at the same time), and after I've gotten a feel for it, I go through it song-by-song and give each track its 'My Rating' I do this so that my 'My Top Rated' playlist (songs of four or greater stars) plays like my dream radio show when played on random. Moneen is a band that I had heard of, but never actually listened to, and after a few listens of "Red Tree," I had taken a real liking to them; to the sound of the album as a whole, without really getting specific about why, nor could I recall any stand-out tracks. As I went through my track by track rating last night however, I was surprised (enough that I was compelled to write this long winded review) by the fact that nearly every song ended up with a four or a five star rating. Their sound is epic, urgent, emotional, and hard hitting at times. The album seems very well crafted and holds your attention from beginning to end. "Bleed And Blister" scorched with great pace and an even greater blast from the six strings. "The Day No One Needed To Know," and "This Is All Bigger Than Me" make you want to play close attention to the lyrics because of their true raw emotion, they make you want to CARE about what these boys are singing about, which ranges on the record from matters of the heart to political issues. If I hadd to put my finger on a favorite I think it would be a tight race between "The Frightening Reality..." and "The Politics...," but I think my favorite aspect of the album is that while retaining a common feel and sound, each song manages to be unique and bring forward its own messages and emotions.

Moneen continue de nous étonner

Moneen, un groupe qui se surpasse à chaque album frappe un autre grand coup avec red tree. Moneen avec leur don pour briser le rythme et pour écrire des titres souvent très long!!! je vous recommande cette album qui va encore plus loin que les derniers mais qui a mon avis aurait pu aller encore un peu plus loin. si vous êtes un fan, procurrez vous le, et si vous ne connaissez pas encore le groupe, c'est une bonne chose d'essayer.

Biography

Formed: 1999 in Brampton, Ontario, Canada

Genre: Alternative

Years Active: '00s

Toronto's emo quartet Moneen began with vocalists/guitarists Kenny Bridges and Chris Hughes, bassist Mark Bowser, and drummer Peter Krpan. Moneen formed in 1999 after the dissolution of Perfectly Normal, and released their debut EP, The Smaller Chairs for the 1900s, the following year on Smallman Records. In 2001, they finally put out their first full-length, the ten-song Theory of Harmonial Value. Along the way, Erik Hughes joined in on bass, and in 2003 Moneen returned with Are We Really Happy...
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Red Tree, Moneen
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