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Station

Station

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Artist: Russian Circles
Label: Suicide Squeeze
Category: Music

List Price: $14.98
Buy New: $13.99
You Save: $0.99 (7%)



New (46) Used (12) from $8.98

Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 13 reviews
Sales Rank: 5870

Media: Audio CD
Discs: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2
Dimensions (in): 5.6 x 4.9 x 0.3

MPN: 70
UPC: 803238007021
EAN: 0803238007021
ASIN: B0016MJ2R8

Release Date: May 6, 2008
Shipping: Eligible for Super Saver Shipping
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours

Tracks:

  • Campaign
  • Harper Lewis
  • Station
  • Verses
  • Youngblood
  • Xavii

Similar Items:

  • Enter
  • Every Red Heart Shines Toward the Red Sun
  • This Will Destroy You
  • At the Soundless Dawn
  • Third

Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
Metal trimmings, minimal jazz primers, and cryptic riffs that hit out of nowhere with the pummeling impact of a comet. Their music weaves up an intense and cinematic albeit soothing clobbering that cannot be pigeonholed. Their lumbering layers of chiseled post rock and feathery psychedelic infusions have both revved and enticed listeners into mental orgasms the world over. They've shared stages with Tool, Dalek, Daughters, and Pelican. Catch them on tour beginning in late May.

Album Description
Russian Circles is a three piece instrumental rock/metal band from Chicago. Similar to fellow Chicago residents Pelican, Russian Circles play epic, sprawling music which runs the gamut of heavy discordant metal, to soft delicate passages. They are known for their energetic live shows, which include tours with Minus the Bear, Chin Up Chin Up, Mono, and Pelican as well as an appearance at the 2006 SXSW. They were also the opening band for Tool while playing in the United Kingdom for their 2007 tour.


Customer Reviews:   Read 8 more reviews...

2 out of 5 stars 2 Stars 4 2 Good Tracks   September 9, 2008
 0 out of 3 found this review helpful

All of you must be either high or best friends with these dudes, because there are only two decent tracks here #4 (Verses) and #6 (Xavii). That's it.

I listen to Explosions in the Sky, The Drift, The Sea and Cake, Broken Social Scene and this cd is just not making the cut. i'm sorry I bought it.



5 out of 5 stars It's about time.   August 7, 2008
I got into the whole post rock/instrumental scene about a year ago, and up untill I heard of Russian Circles I thought the whole genre was full of very creative musicians who unfortunetly can not really play their instruments well. Bands like Explosions in the Sky, Isis, or Pelican played music that I like, but it would be pushing it to say that any of them are actually very technical with their playing. Isis was very right-hand rhythm oriented and were talented in that aspect, but compared to other metal bands outside of the post rock genre they really don't measure up much (they still make great songs however). What does all this have to do with Russian Circles and Station? Well beforehand I always had wondered what an instrumental band would sound like if everyone in it were great musicians, and I think with Russian Circle we have the answer.
This CD proves wrong any concept of what defined post rock, other than the long instrumental part. They sound like (for the most part) that they were trying to be a "normal" band with a singer, but along the way they never could find anyone who fit so they just played without one, putting more focus on the music. So lets get right into that:

Campaign: I honestly could care less for this song. It's pretty much just ambience for half the song and then never really builds into anything meaningful. Having said that, I don't mind listening to it, I just feel the album would be the same without it. I usually skip to the next track-

Harper Lewis: This song blew me away the first time I heard it, and it continues to be one of my overall favorite songs of all time. This is where I realized this band was something else: The guitarist uses a loop pedal to play riffs over each other, he's actually playing heavy riffs, and he even finger taps! The drummer has some meaty fills and a few really original rhythms played on the high-hat stand. The bassist has heavy chunky beats to sustain the groove. Overall, with all the changes you would expect from a post rock band thrown in with all the musicianship of a jam band, this song owns.

Station: Pretty much everything I said about the last song goes here as well. Harper Lewis and Station are the two best songs on this album, and I could listen to them over and over again.

Versus: Another song that's ambience based, but I actually like this song. I think it fits very well as an ending to Station. It doesn't hold much on its own however. Has a cool disorted bass line.

Youngblood: This song tries to be another hard hitting heavy song like Harper Lewis or Station, but imo it falls short. It's still not a bad song, but it just doesn't really quite reach what those other songs did. Starts with a constant driving pace up untill about the last minute, then it dies/rebuilds for a pretty solid epic ending.

Xavii: The last song on the album is one more of thier slower atmospheric songs. The shortest song on the album by quite a bit, it just seems to be there as a needed ending. It's not a bad song, but it's not a great one either.

Overall, I think I would really rate this album with four songs becuase of the slower songs that I usually skip. But because of the inventiveness of their few masterpieces, I give it five. You can't hear music like this anywhere else, comparing them to other instrumental bands just doesn't work, they are too different. If you can, give Harper Lewis or Station a listen, trust me it's wortht the album. I can't wait to see what they come out with next!



5 out of 5 stars amazing.   August 6, 2008
simply.

i heard some of the songs off this on their recent US tour with daughters and young widows, and i was blown away. i hadn't even known this was out until after i saw the show, but immediately bought it.

i really don't know what to say about this album except it is much better in every way. they have really outdone themselves and their previous releases with this one, and i have to say it's one of my favorite albums of all time.

i just hope they don't stray too far from what they have here, it'd be a real shame.



4 out of 5 stars 8.5/10   July 30, 2008
If Russian Circles' first album was great, then their second album, Station, is...well, also great. Apparently they have remained aware of what is musically important right now, without stagnating themselves by composing typical run-of-the-mill post-rock. No, instead Russian Circles now has a catalog containing two developed and intricate albums of enigmatic instrumental music that can keep one's interest from start to finish without relying on hooks and with little to no hints of pretension. Not to mention a good balance of lights and heavies.

Station starts out on the light side with "Campaign," which is pleasantly mellow yet panoramic and multi-layered at the same time. "Harper Lewis" is a reminder--in case "Campaign" distracted you from the fact--that this band often crosses the ill-defined and often obscure boundaries between rock and metal. It is a post-apocalyptic, plodding dirge with an electric punch, which opens the door into the self-titled track, which contains what is probably the most memorable series of riffs on the album. Combine that with more-than-competent drumming that shifts so easily between being primal and tribal to being delicate and shrewd. "Verses" calms the mood down, starting with a more ambient and atmospheric sound, and adding a rather amazing melody that begins right around the 3:45 mark. "Youngblood" delivers another memorable metallic riff and breaks off into sections that altogether seem to effortlessly merge modern-day post-rock with old-school traditional metal. The album concludes logically with the slow and meditative "Xavii," which easily brings things to an end, yet hints at a promise of more to come.

Station is a success. Hopefully Russian Circles will stay in the game for a long time, and take their time in making fresh music in the years to come. With their honed songwriting skills and great live performances, they should be a band that doesn't just come and go, and it safe to hope for future material that is equally as good or even better than what they have presented so far. Recommended also for fans of Explosions in the Sky, Isis, Pelican, etc.



5 out of 5 stars Excellent Sophomore Release   July 2, 2008
Russian Circles' second album is perhaps even better than critically acclaimed Enter (critically acclaimed in an underground sort of way). These guys are excellent musicians and their arrangments are very interesting and unique. If you are looking to get a taste of it, check out their myspace page and listen to Verses (available on their myspace page at this time - 7/2/2008). This song gives you a taste of what they do - slow build up and almost classical melodies leading up to some heavy riffs in the end. I know that there are other bands out there that create music that blands classical and heavy, but seeing these guys live and what they are able to do with just three instruments made me appreciate their music even more.

If you're new to the genre of post-metal /post-rock instrumental bands, if you are into Pink Floyd, Porcupine Tree, Tool, Isis or Radiohead, this music may appeal to you.

Also, Amazon's description states that they have shared stage with Daughters. Don't let that confuse you - I find no overlap between the two bands.


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