Search - Everything Goes Cold :: Black Out The Sun

Black Out The Sun
Everything Goes Cold
Black Out The Sun
Genres: Dance & Electronic, Pop, Rock
 
  •  Track Listings (11) - Disc #1

Limited Edition LP Vinyl version available HERE. The San Francisco 4-piece VANIISH began when singer/guitarist Keven Tecon (ex Wax Idols, The Soft Moon, Veil Veil Vanish) left his previous bands after his mothers death in ...  more »

     
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CD Details

All Artists: Everything Goes Cold
Title: Black Out The Sun
Members Wishing: 1
Total Copies: 0
Label: Metropolis Records
Release Date: 7/8/2014
Genres: Dance & Electronic, Pop, Rock
Style: Electronica
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1
UPC: 782388094429

Synopsis

Product Description
Limited Edition LP Vinyl version available HERE. The San Francisco 4-piece VANIISH began when singer/guitarist Keven Tecon (ex Wax Idols, The Soft Moon, Veil Veil Vanish) left his previous bands after his mothers death in early 2013. I was on tour in Eastern Europe in the middle of winter when it happened and it was too much to handle. I couldnt keep it up. After returning home, Tecon decided to focus entirely on a new project along with fellow Wax Idols and Veil Veil Vanish member Amy Rosenoff (bass) and SF music-scene luminaries Adam Beck (guitar/keyboards) and Nick Ott (drums). The album Memory Work is both dense and spacious, combining the atmosphere of early 4AD with the psychedelic shoegaze of Creation Records. It envelopes the listener into its world of eerie soundscapes and surreal lyrics. There is an interesting mix of synths, guitars, samples, drum machines, and live drums. We like the idea that you cant tell whats real and what isnt. The album was produced by Monte Vallier (Weekend, The Soft Moon, Wax Idols) The title track is the sound of machines breathing and fluids pumping, with a pulse beat overladen with brush strokes of synth. Kaleidoscoped ditches the monochrome for crystallized shards of guitar and a sparkling chorus thats hard to see coming. Search and Replace is vicious and would be more at home in 2080 than 1980 while the addictive melody of Merge is the closest the album comes to an actual pop song. Succession gives the second side of the album some breathing room with its sparse production and icy spikes of guitar. Lush album closer La foi au fil de leau, sung entirely in French, could easily find its way onto a film score.