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Orc
Barnes and Noble
Orc
Current price: $16.99
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Barnes and Noble
Orc
Current price: $16.99
Size: CD
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On their 400th album in the last two years, one might assume that the
Oh Sees
might be running out of steam. Maybe they would be out of ideas, lacking fire or retreading ground previously trod to the point of being worn out. Nope, none of that.
Orc
is another classic
album that shows no signs of wear and tear anyplace in the operation. About half the record is made up of songs that are a white-hot blast of blown-out guitars, dual drummers bashing the living snot out of their kits, a bassist trying to hold it all together in the middle of a hurricane, and
John Dwyer
yelping like he just put his hand down on a hot stove. The other half is split between thudding heavy metal that comes complete with proggy organ breakdowns ("Animated Violence"), creepy art rock that showcases
Dwyer
's spookiest vocals ("Jettison"), tracks that impinge on the synth rock of
's
Damaged Bug
alter ego ("Paranoise"), and two songs that feature long codas with violin ("Keys to the Castle") and drum ("Raw Optics") solos. Through it all,
and crew ride the dynamic shifts between quiet and loud, navigate the madly juxtaposed sections, weirdly complicated hard prog, and mindlessly bashed-out garage rock, and basically keep listeners on their toes as it's almost impossible to guess what might happen next, even within such a singular world as the one
has spent years carving out for the band. No matter what shape or form the songs take, they are driven by
's non-stop energy and the band's uncanny ability to transmit it through the speakers like sparks from a live wire. He's truly an indie rock treasure and if he and the
made a hundred albums a year, they'd all be worth listening to. Especially if they had the raging fire, killer songs, and unpredictable genius that
has. ~ Tim Sendra
Oh Sees
might be running out of steam. Maybe they would be out of ideas, lacking fire or retreading ground previously trod to the point of being worn out. Nope, none of that.
Orc
is another classic
album that shows no signs of wear and tear anyplace in the operation. About half the record is made up of songs that are a white-hot blast of blown-out guitars, dual drummers bashing the living snot out of their kits, a bassist trying to hold it all together in the middle of a hurricane, and
John Dwyer
yelping like he just put his hand down on a hot stove. The other half is split between thudding heavy metal that comes complete with proggy organ breakdowns ("Animated Violence"), creepy art rock that showcases
Dwyer
's spookiest vocals ("Jettison"), tracks that impinge on the synth rock of
's
Damaged Bug
alter ego ("Paranoise"), and two songs that feature long codas with violin ("Keys to the Castle") and drum ("Raw Optics") solos. Through it all,
and crew ride the dynamic shifts between quiet and loud, navigate the madly juxtaposed sections, weirdly complicated hard prog, and mindlessly bashed-out garage rock, and basically keep listeners on their toes as it's almost impossible to guess what might happen next, even within such a singular world as the one
has spent years carving out for the band. No matter what shape or form the songs take, they are driven by
's non-stop energy and the band's uncanny ability to transmit it through the speakers like sparks from a live wire. He's truly an indie rock treasure and if he and the
made a hundred albums a year, they'd all be worth listening to. Especially if they had the raging fire, killer songs, and unpredictable genius that
has. ~ Tim Sendra