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If Only a Sweet Surrender to the Nights to Come Be True

Esmerine

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Album Review

A French female name meaning quiet and sensitive, Esmerine is a fitting moniker for the overall sound of one of the many Godspeed You Black Emperor! splinter groups. Guitars have been left in their cases for If Only a Sweet Surrender to the Nights to Come be True, a sublime chamber rock album that brings Rachel's or Wim Mertens to mind. Cello, marimba, and drums supply most of sounds here, but good luck trying to figure out who does what since the liner notes are in unreadable calligraphy. The three opening tracks are serene, melancholic, and well-composed, avoiding the quiet-loud-quiet or builds-to-crescendo device. "Where There Is No Love There Is No Justice" is a surprise with drumming driving the rest of the group in the same way most rock drummers set the pace. "Sweet Surrender Be True" sounds like a team-up between the Kronos Quartet and Harold Budd, right down to the echoing in cistern piano. "Luna Park" is the only track approaching a dud: a minute and a half of what sounds like porch doors in need of a good shot of oil far in the distance. Then the excellent drumming is back for "The Marvelous Engines of Resistance," an upbeat whirling-dervish closer. Hopefully, Esmerine won't get lost in shuffle of Montreal art-rockers; their debut is a great record, hip scene or not.

Customer Reviews

A strange little genre-defying album

A weird duo budded from the equally weird GY!BE, Esmerine sets out to prove that post rock is all about what's missing. The songs are missing structure, like most post-rock, but Esmerine also rejects the usual instrumentation of guitars and drums in favor of cellos and marimbas. At its best, the result ranges from delicate and trembling to eerie, without ever overreaching in its intensity or seeming to transition at all. However, at times it verges on maddeningly repetitive, or even soporific ("Tungsten", "Nohna's Lullaby"). GY!BE fans will feel right at home after a brief adjustment period. The rest of us will wonder when the intro ends and the music starts. "No Footprints" is the one stand-out, itself worth half of the star rating; and it also happens to be the most accessible. It is the piece that all the others seem to orbit around, which makes it all the more pity that it is album only.

Biography

Genre: Alternative

Years Active: '00s

Splinter group Esmerine is a chamber rock ensemble formed by Bruce Cawdron and Beckie Foon, members of Godspeed You Black Emperor! and A Silver Mt. Zion, respectively. Unlike their other bands, Esmerine lacks guitars, instead focusing on drums, cello, and marimbas. After gigging around Montreal, they released their debut album, If Only a Sweet Surrender to the Nights to Come Be True, on the U.K. label Resonant in...
Full Bio
If Only a Sweet Surrender to the Nights to Come Be True, Esmerine
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Customer Ratings

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