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Lift Your Skinny Fists Like Antennas to Heaven

Godspeed You Black Emperor!

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Album Review

Lift Your Skinny Fists Like Antennas to Heaven, the much-anticipated follow-up to Godspeed You Black Emperor's Slow Riot, is a double-disc achievement of four works (each with multiple parts): "Storm," "Static," "Sleep," and "Antennas to Heaven." It is a windfall for any fan of ambient pop, orchestral rock, space rock, or simply lush string arrangements who understands how powerful love, melancholy, and frustration can be. The main complaint voiced by critics of Godspeed's music is that their works just repeat the same pattern: start out sparse and slow, build-build-build, crescendo. While there are certainly crescendos, there is no such predictable pattern repeated among the works on Lift Your Skinny Fists Like Antennas to Heaven — it's loaded with dynamics, unexpected sections, strong emotions and beauty.

The album opener, "Storm," is a leap for GYBE! that, alone, makes this release worth getting. It's a rapturous work that rises with a potent melancholy, driven by heartrending emotions. "Storm" vents a powerful frustration (each listener can insert their own reasons why) with majestic screams of strings, guitars, and layers, resulting in a climactic and passionate soaring. It eventually winds down into an exhausted aftermath of piano, underlying drones, and frustrated rants. The second piece, "Static," is a wandering, isolationist piece of bleak expanses shaded with darker emotions, but the remaining two works raise the album back up to the impressive standard set by the opening cut, though with less furor and even more loveliness. "Sleep" opens with an elderly gentleman reminiscing about Coney Island, and his frank and amusing narration briefly recalls the recordings of David Greenberger and scenes from the documentary Vernon, FL. This narration is followed by a slow and melodic piece featuring a pseudo-theremin effect amidst all of the other instrumentation. "Antennas to Heaven" opens with someone playing acoustic guitar, singing "What'll We Do with the Baby-O," soon washed over with sound, which then gives way to a brief chorus of glockenspiels, and on.

During most of Lift Your Skinny Fists Like Antennas to Heaven, musical and emotional opposites alternate as regularly, and naturally, as breathing: delicate string work and rock-out guitar and drums, spoken word and walls of sound, gracious and possessed, tip-toes and cliff-diving, dark hallways and blinding sunshine.

Customer Reviews

Genre-bending and excellent

With a barrage of pigeonholes and genres flying around, it is a little difficult to find an appropriate tag for a band who make a double CD with just the 4 songs, the shortest of which chips in at 19 minutes. While the band seem comfortable with 'post rock', there is little doubt that this album contains space rock, anthemic rock, orchestral noise and no vocals. Radiohead's Thom Yorke is a big fan, and it is easy to see why - Godspeed is the kind of album that used to keep people glued to their record decks in the 1970s - think Vangelis or Pink Floyd. All cinematic sweeps and dynamic beauty, this is almost the opposite of a Girls Aloud album - it's not for the kids. It also isn't for dipping in and out of; nor is it something you should expect to hear on Radio 2 in a hurry. It is, however, a phenomenal way to spend an hour and a half with your headphones. Gathering Storm may hit 22 minutes, but the Feeder-like rock will have you holding your breath throughout. If you like Sigur Ros, but find them a bit anaemic, Godspeed You Black Emperor are your band.

amazing album, one of the best I own

godspeed you! black emperor make overwhelming musical soundscapes and this is one of their finest. you won't always "get" their music on your first listen, but who says that's a bad thing? the depth of music they produce is unsurpassed, apart from (perhaps) by full, classical-style, orchestras. i can heartily recommend this, and all their other albums.

Awe inspiring!

A simply stunning, and truly great album. Arguably their best album to date.

Biography

Formed: 1994 in Montreal, Quebec, Canada

Genre: Alternative

Years Active: '90s, '00s

The instrumental, multimedia Montreal group Godspeed You Black Emperor! creates extended, repetition-oriented chamber rock. The minimal and patient builds-to-crescendo of the group's compositions result in a meditative and hypnotic listen that becomes almost narrative when combined with found-sound splices and the films of their visual collaborators. GYBE! formed in 1994, and that year self-released a limited-run (33 copies) cassette entitled All Lights F****d on the Hairy Amp Drooling. The band's...
Full bio

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