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Everything Is Good Here/Please Come Home
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Everything Is Good Here/Please Come Home in Chattanooga, TN
Current price: $15.99

Barnes and Noble
Everything Is Good Here/Please Come Home in Chattanooga, TN
Current price: $15.99
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Size: OS
Having created some of the strongest music in his life on the previous
Angels of Light
album,
Michael Gira
maintains the winning streak but explores a newer, more controlled delicacy on
Everything is Good Here
. It's hardly a new move for him, of course, but in ways this album, the third in the
guise, finds his extremes of harrowing, wrenching music and performance, and a calmer, almost mystical approach, more integrated than ever before. The drama in his vocals and arrangements are more than ever implicit instead of directly blasting, to beautiful and powerful effect.
"Palisades"
sets this tone from the start, incorporating everything from backing choirs and dank, dark riffs to the quietest of arrangements into one cohesive performance. Other songs that hit the balance just right include
"Nations,"
with its quiet, persistent vibes part a counterbalance to the more insistent guitars and piano, and the incredible
"Sunset Park,"
with the words delivered as a steady mantra over a surging, slow burn performance that feels like a triumphant march.
Gira
's gift for ritualistic theatricality certainly hasn't left him, as even a casual listen to the increasingly frenetic
"All Souls' Rising"
-- keep an ear out for the almost stabbing vocal bursts -- or the even more freaked out
"Rose of Los Angeles"
show. On the quieter side through and through,
"What You Were,"
with
's cracking vocals and piano providing the centerpiece, is the album's hidden treasure, the lyrics of loss, regret, and mystery particularly compelling. Both
's core backing musicians, and the many guests throughout, contribute incalculably to the end result, whether it's
Larry Mullins
' always excellent percussion, or
David Coulter
's work with everything from violin (
"Kosinski"
) to a children's choir. ~ Ned Raggett
Angels of Light
album,
Michael Gira
maintains the winning streak but explores a newer, more controlled delicacy on
Everything is Good Here
. It's hardly a new move for him, of course, but in ways this album, the third in the
guise, finds his extremes of harrowing, wrenching music and performance, and a calmer, almost mystical approach, more integrated than ever before. The drama in his vocals and arrangements are more than ever implicit instead of directly blasting, to beautiful and powerful effect.
"Palisades"
sets this tone from the start, incorporating everything from backing choirs and dank, dark riffs to the quietest of arrangements into one cohesive performance. Other songs that hit the balance just right include
"Nations,"
with its quiet, persistent vibes part a counterbalance to the more insistent guitars and piano, and the incredible
"Sunset Park,"
with the words delivered as a steady mantra over a surging, slow burn performance that feels like a triumphant march.
Gira
's gift for ritualistic theatricality certainly hasn't left him, as even a casual listen to the increasingly frenetic
"All Souls' Rising"
-- keep an ear out for the almost stabbing vocal bursts -- or the even more freaked out
"Rose of Los Angeles"
show. On the quieter side through and through,
"What You Were,"
with
's cracking vocals and piano providing the centerpiece, is the album's hidden treasure, the lyrics of loss, regret, and mystery particularly compelling. Both
's core backing musicians, and the many guests throughout, contribute incalculably to the end result, whether it's
Larry Mullins
' always excellent percussion, or
David Coulter
's work with everything from violin (
"Kosinski"
) to a children's choir. ~ Ned Raggett
Having created some of the strongest music in his life on the previous
Angels of Light
album,
Michael Gira
maintains the winning streak but explores a newer, more controlled delicacy on
Everything is Good Here
. It's hardly a new move for him, of course, but in ways this album, the third in the
guise, finds his extremes of harrowing, wrenching music and performance, and a calmer, almost mystical approach, more integrated than ever before. The drama in his vocals and arrangements are more than ever implicit instead of directly blasting, to beautiful and powerful effect.
"Palisades"
sets this tone from the start, incorporating everything from backing choirs and dank, dark riffs to the quietest of arrangements into one cohesive performance. Other songs that hit the balance just right include
"Nations,"
with its quiet, persistent vibes part a counterbalance to the more insistent guitars and piano, and the incredible
"Sunset Park,"
with the words delivered as a steady mantra over a surging, slow burn performance that feels like a triumphant march.
Gira
's gift for ritualistic theatricality certainly hasn't left him, as even a casual listen to the increasingly frenetic
"All Souls' Rising"
-- keep an ear out for the almost stabbing vocal bursts -- or the even more freaked out
"Rose of Los Angeles"
show. On the quieter side through and through,
"What You Were,"
with
's cracking vocals and piano providing the centerpiece, is the album's hidden treasure, the lyrics of loss, regret, and mystery particularly compelling. Both
's core backing musicians, and the many guests throughout, contribute incalculably to the end result, whether it's
Larry Mullins
' always excellent percussion, or
David Coulter
's work with everything from violin (
"Kosinski"
) to a children's choir. ~ Ned Raggett
Angels of Light
album,
Michael Gira
maintains the winning streak but explores a newer, more controlled delicacy on
Everything is Good Here
. It's hardly a new move for him, of course, but in ways this album, the third in the
guise, finds his extremes of harrowing, wrenching music and performance, and a calmer, almost mystical approach, more integrated than ever before. The drama in his vocals and arrangements are more than ever implicit instead of directly blasting, to beautiful and powerful effect.
"Palisades"
sets this tone from the start, incorporating everything from backing choirs and dank, dark riffs to the quietest of arrangements into one cohesive performance. Other songs that hit the balance just right include
"Nations,"
with its quiet, persistent vibes part a counterbalance to the more insistent guitars and piano, and the incredible
"Sunset Park,"
with the words delivered as a steady mantra over a surging, slow burn performance that feels like a triumphant march.
Gira
's gift for ritualistic theatricality certainly hasn't left him, as even a casual listen to the increasingly frenetic
"All Souls' Rising"
-- keep an ear out for the almost stabbing vocal bursts -- or the even more freaked out
"Rose of Los Angeles"
show. On the quieter side through and through,
"What You Were,"
with
's cracking vocals and piano providing the centerpiece, is the album's hidden treasure, the lyrics of loss, regret, and mystery particularly compelling. Both
's core backing musicians, and the many guests throughout, contribute incalculably to the end result, whether it's
Larry Mullins
' always excellent percussion, or
David Coulter
's work with everything from violin (
"Kosinski"
) to a children's choir. ~ Ned Raggett

















