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Time & Withering - EP

Mouth of the Architect

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Album Review

Mouth of the Architect came out swinging with their inaugural effort, 2004's excellent Time & Withering, wasting no time in adding their name to the increasingly popular (and crowded) trance-metal scene of the early 2000s. Contemporary acts like Isis and Mogwai definitely make for easy comparisons, but, as is often the case, the overwhelming, often unacknowledged influence here comes from Oakland art-metal pioneers Neurosis. The latter's well-documented accomplishments are particularly strong in Mouth of the Architect's creations, which, as well as embarking on the lengthy, brooding expansiveness championed by all of the above, also make use of sparsely placed, ragged-throat, hardcore-style vocals drunk straight from the Neurosis wellspring. All this is well and good, however, since Mouth possess the requisite songwriting inventiveness and performance chops to bend and shape the style to their designs. As such, epic offerings like "A Vivid Chaos," "Soil to Stone," and "The Worm" constitute daunting exercises in mounting and relaxing tension, weaving delicate guitar pickings and the odd keyboard ambiance to the densely layered crunch-riff bedrock at their foundations. The only exception arrives with the disc's third offering, which breaks ranks to conclude at just under five minutes, and invariably sounds incomplete and substandard for it; but not enough to mar the overall accomplishment, marking Time & Withering as a startling mature and recommendable debut.

Customer Reviews

I never used to like Mastodon...

Until I bought this E.P. I had only seen Mastodon live, and was like, what is this stuff? I really had no idea what sludge was all about, but being an obsessive-compulsive fool, I give just about anything a chance. So I looked around, got some Pelican, some Isis, and this phenomenal buy of an E.P....Time and Withering. Like all good sludge (not that I pretend to be an expert), MotA has a thick, almost over-bearing density to its sound. Such is the essence of sludge. A little like Pelican (who really don't have vocals) in relying simply on creative walls of sound to paint the seafarers picture, a little like Mastodon in the sonic vocals they do have, MotA's T&W E.P. is a great 4 bucks spent. This album starts off sort of disappointing, for the vocals seem to be a sonic depiction of the album cover...the voice being that of a vortex...but once you get to the second half of "A Vivid Chaos", it starts to pick up a bit. The second track..."Soil to Stone", is assuredly and by far the best track on the album (and sort of reminds my in a strange way of the music on the original Metroid game...don't ask me why. Maybe it's the hypnotizing effect they achieve), followed by The Worm, then the other two in which ever order you like. The Time and Withering is a tiresome piece, and I can never listen to it more than once a day. It wears my a** out, and I have to put on Opeth or anything else, really afterwards. Still, it gets my occasional spin, and is worth every cent you'll spend.

Good instrumental metal album

I had the opportunity to see these guys in concert when they opened for Khanate. I was impressed enough to buy this album and have been very happy with it ever since. If you like ISIS, Neurosis, or Cult of Luna you will probably enjoy it. I still listen to this album more than their latest effort. If you like long, well crafted metal songs that build than you I think you will probably like this album. Just enough vocals and screaming to keep you into it.

Pretty Good

They sound A LOT like neurosis but not quite as good. It's a really great value for just 4 bucks though. It's a long as some full length albums. If you feel like getting lost in a desolate lonly soundscape then it's definatly worth buying.

Biography

Formed: Dayton, OH

Genre: Rock

Years Active: '00s

At the time of their first effort, 2004's Time & Withering, Dayton, OH's Mouth of the Architect featured Jason Watkins (vocals, keyboards, samples), Gregory Lahm (guitar, vocals), Dave Mann (drums), Alex Vernon (guitar, vocals), and Derik Sommer (bass), and followed in the footsteps of Neurosis, Isis, and Godspeed You! Black Emperor in exploring heavy metal's more progressive, trance-inducing reaches. But this lineup splintered shortly thereafter, and Mouth of the Architect almost fell apart...
Full Bio
Time & Withering - EP, Mouth of the Architect
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