Each and every one of us remember the odd concert very, very special. Do not know about you but I've been lucky enough to get excited - and even feel like I shed the odd tear or two - in several of the concerts I've attended over the last few years. One of them was that I lived in June 2010 in Cambridge, UK population who visited to see the impressive live parents "Everything All The Time", surely one of the albums most memorable indie rock of the last decade.
The melodic majesty Band Of Horses exhibiting in this LP seems to have no rival. And all is largely due to Ben Bridwell tables that had been acquired over the years with Carissa's Wierd, forgotten - and unfairly undervalued - band "chamber rock" that Bridwell headed for a total of eight long years. If we analyze the sound of albums like "You Should Be at Home Here" or "Songs About Leaving" from which we understand distinctly that has characterized the later creations of the disturbing bearded South Carolina.
Subpop opted for Band Of Horses for the launch of this album and no mistake. In fact when we return to play "Everything All The Time" we realize, once again, the greatest quality of this LP: its timeless factor. Even today the first work of the band of horses sounds so different, fresh and captivating not seem to have been eight long years since come to light. My own theory is given by all the optimal cross currents between the crystalline guitar line and howls that come from the throat of Bridwell. 'The Funeral' (who does not love this? No doubt an instant classic) or 'Part One' are blessed examples of the intense blue color filter that has come to turn some of our sweetest and memorable dreams.
Band Of Horses are large. And medially peaked with "Infinite Arms". That is undeniable. But so is that "Everything All The Time" is the magnum opus of some giants that got people like me (or who knows ... like you?) Crying as a madeleine to hear the chorus of 'The Great Salt Lake' in direct. Yes, folks, that's what happened in Cambridge. And so I will be eternal and duly grateful.
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