Home
Angels of Destruction!
Barnes and Noble
Loading Inventory...
Angels of Destruction! in Chattanooga, TN
Current price: $20.99

Barnes and Noble
Angels of Destruction! in Chattanooga, TN
Current price: $20.99
Loading Inventory...
Size: OS
Ten years and six albums on from their debut (not counting live discs and seasonal offerings),
Marah
are a significantly more mature and ambitious band than the scrappy Philly roots rockers of their youth, but while 2008's
Angels of Destruction!
is a rich, audacious set of songs dressed up in adventurous production and broadly dynamic arrangements, it shows that they're a group that has learned how to have it both ways, still reveling in the swagger and street smarts of their earliest work.
David Bielanko
and
Serge Bielanko
's songs play out on a broader musical canvas these days -- check out the Russian accordion figures and no wave synth patterns on
"Angels on a Passing Train,"
the horn-bolstered guitar boogie of
"Wild West Love Song,"
and the loud, proud bagpipe coda on
"Wilderness"
-- and the band makes the most of the talents of its newest member,
Christine Smith
, whose keyboards and backing vocals give
's performances a new depth. But the folks who populate
David
Serge
's songs have thankfully changed little over the years, and
sings their stories with a passion and honesty that make them both vivid and thoroughly believable, from the cops celebrating on a rowdy New Year's Eve to a romantic interlude played out over beers in somebody's kitchen.
's music has been compared to
Bruce Springsteen
,
Bob Dylan
, and
Van Morrison
often enough that those allusions are all but cliches, but on
(as with all their best music)
don't sound as if they're copying any of those artists so much as they simply draw from the same well and have the same gift to make magic of their tales of life in the city, and their music, both nimble and muscular, is as impressive as their songcraft. Simply put,
are one of America's great rock bands, and
is an album that brims with joy, rage, and adventure, and deserves your attention. ~ Mark Deming
Marah
are a significantly more mature and ambitious band than the scrappy Philly roots rockers of their youth, but while 2008's
Angels of Destruction!
is a rich, audacious set of songs dressed up in adventurous production and broadly dynamic arrangements, it shows that they're a group that has learned how to have it both ways, still reveling in the swagger and street smarts of their earliest work.
David Bielanko
and
Serge Bielanko
's songs play out on a broader musical canvas these days -- check out the Russian accordion figures and no wave synth patterns on
"Angels on a Passing Train,"
the horn-bolstered guitar boogie of
"Wild West Love Song,"
and the loud, proud bagpipe coda on
"Wilderness"
-- and the band makes the most of the talents of its newest member,
Christine Smith
, whose keyboards and backing vocals give
's performances a new depth. But the folks who populate
David
Serge
's songs have thankfully changed little over the years, and
sings their stories with a passion and honesty that make them both vivid and thoroughly believable, from the cops celebrating on a rowdy New Year's Eve to a romantic interlude played out over beers in somebody's kitchen.
's music has been compared to
Bruce Springsteen
,
Bob Dylan
, and
Van Morrison
often enough that those allusions are all but cliches, but on
(as with all their best music)
don't sound as if they're copying any of those artists so much as they simply draw from the same well and have the same gift to make magic of their tales of life in the city, and their music, both nimble and muscular, is as impressive as their songcraft. Simply put,
are one of America's great rock bands, and
is an album that brims with joy, rage, and adventure, and deserves your attention. ~ Mark Deming
Ten years and six albums on from their debut (not counting live discs and seasonal offerings),
Marah
are a significantly more mature and ambitious band than the scrappy Philly roots rockers of their youth, but while 2008's
Angels of Destruction!
is a rich, audacious set of songs dressed up in adventurous production and broadly dynamic arrangements, it shows that they're a group that has learned how to have it both ways, still reveling in the swagger and street smarts of their earliest work.
David Bielanko
and
Serge Bielanko
's songs play out on a broader musical canvas these days -- check out the Russian accordion figures and no wave synth patterns on
"Angels on a Passing Train,"
the horn-bolstered guitar boogie of
"Wild West Love Song,"
and the loud, proud bagpipe coda on
"Wilderness"
-- and the band makes the most of the talents of its newest member,
Christine Smith
, whose keyboards and backing vocals give
's performances a new depth. But the folks who populate
David
Serge
's songs have thankfully changed little over the years, and
sings their stories with a passion and honesty that make them both vivid and thoroughly believable, from the cops celebrating on a rowdy New Year's Eve to a romantic interlude played out over beers in somebody's kitchen.
's music has been compared to
Bruce Springsteen
,
Bob Dylan
, and
Van Morrison
often enough that those allusions are all but cliches, but on
(as with all their best music)
don't sound as if they're copying any of those artists so much as they simply draw from the same well and have the same gift to make magic of their tales of life in the city, and their music, both nimble and muscular, is as impressive as their songcraft. Simply put,
are one of America's great rock bands, and
is an album that brims with joy, rage, and adventure, and deserves your attention. ~ Mark Deming
Marah
are a significantly more mature and ambitious band than the scrappy Philly roots rockers of their youth, but while 2008's
Angels of Destruction!
is a rich, audacious set of songs dressed up in adventurous production and broadly dynamic arrangements, it shows that they're a group that has learned how to have it both ways, still reveling in the swagger and street smarts of their earliest work.
David Bielanko
and
Serge Bielanko
's songs play out on a broader musical canvas these days -- check out the Russian accordion figures and no wave synth patterns on
"Angels on a Passing Train,"
the horn-bolstered guitar boogie of
"Wild West Love Song,"
and the loud, proud bagpipe coda on
"Wilderness"
-- and the band makes the most of the talents of its newest member,
Christine Smith
, whose keyboards and backing vocals give
's performances a new depth. But the folks who populate
David
Serge
's songs have thankfully changed little over the years, and
sings their stories with a passion and honesty that make them both vivid and thoroughly believable, from the cops celebrating on a rowdy New Year's Eve to a romantic interlude played out over beers in somebody's kitchen.
's music has been compared to
Bruce Springsteen
,
Bob Dylan
, and
Van Morrison
often enough that those allusions are all but cliches, but on
(as with all their best music)
don't sound as if they're copying any of those artists so much as they simply draw from the same well and have the same gift to make magic of their tales of life in the city, and their music, both nimble and muscular, is as impressive as their songcraft. Simply put,
are one of America's great rock bands, and
is an album that brims with joy, rage, and adventure, and deserves your attention. ~ Mark Deming
![Flying With Angels [Red Vinyl] [Barnes & Noble Exclusive]](https://prodimage.images-bn.com/pimages/0711297410402_p0_v1_s600x595.jpg)
















