The wound that left Aereogramme in the heart of the audience will probably have hinklaffen quite a while in front of him. What this exceptional band have created with their three and a half albums, is probably unrepeatable in the history of music. The Twilight Sad, also from Scotland and stylistically quite similar, are now for many fans of the hoped-for rapid Aereogramme comforter, and the first album can really convince almost completely. The first three songs are really perfect, hard to put into words just breathtaking. Sad melodies, piano staccato, the incredibly soulful singing (with a very nice Scottish accent), the poetic texts that suddenly guitar attacks, everything just seems to be just perfect (on the drums I will later go). Only the tracklist reads like a poem: "Last year's rain did not fall quite so hard," "That Summer, At Home I Had Become The Invisible Boy", "Talking With Fireworks / Here It Never Snowed." The songs are in themselves all very convincing, although the tracks 4 and 9 certainly could be described as a filler, if one were disposed because evil. "Walking For Two Days" is just perfect and will immediately caught by a dramatic, screeching guitar melody. The guitars hearing itself, as would work on trees with their chainsaws lumberjack. The vocal performance in this piece simply unmatched and makes the third track to my personal all-time favorite on the album.
But there is one thing that I have to complain about "Fourteen Autumns & Fifteen Winters": the lack of Abwechslunsgreichtum. So most of the songs work the same way, forming even often almost identical. Even the drums are not really innovative, though rumbles always vigorously to himself and sets the tone here and there, but degenerates through the monotonous continuous use for most boring instrument panel. The accordion passages inspire, because they give the music a little Folkisches. Arcade Fire, the last speaker said, and has therefore absolutely right. In conclusion remains to say that this album is also in the long term and excited to like the songs more and more, after you get used to something at the lack of variety. If the band had married just a little more, we certainly would have been in the house a new masterpiece. You may be eager to further publications. In articles I read that The Twilight Sad at the beginning of her creative writing half-hour noise epics, with lots of guitar walls, wacky ideas and sound effects. It can therefore still a lot to be expected, and with a little luck you will say in ten years that the end of the era Aereogramme was the beginning of the era The Twilight Sad.