i wrote a review of dredg's el cielo at work a few days ago except i got bored and didnt really do a last paragraph
Quote:
I'm not a smoker (but I have bummed a fag, har har har), and I don't play on starting, but I imagine that Dredg's El Cielo is the musical equivalent of having a ten hour long, stressful day at work (another thing I can only imagine) and then flolloping onto a chair in a park and lighting up a cigarette. My usual musical diet normally consists of extremely intense music - either dramatically, a la Tool, Devin Townsend or Neurosis, or just in terms of tempo/rhythm, a la The Dillinger Escape Plan or Behold... The Arctopus. Dredg's El Cielo is pretty much the polar opposite of this; Dredg use their extraordinary talent at creating atmospheres to pacify, rather than making you want to rip your face off.
It all starts with Gavin Hayes's voice, which I'll just straight off say is beautiful. I'd even go so far to say that even if the rest of the band had no clue what they were doing, he could still carry this album into the "decent" category. But the rest of the band do know what they're doing, and that is where the fun begins. Using a laid back songwriting style that ebbs and flows casually between musical ideas, beautiful tones on their instruments, and subtle layering, manipulating, and sampling of sounds the band accentuates Gavin Hayes's voice perfectly. The end result is hard to describe, its not really ambitious enough for "prog", far too relaxing for the "alternative", and too damn good to be classified under the pedestrian, adjectiveless "rock". Either way it is beautiful and it is relaxing, thats all you really need to know.
But..butbutbut: It's not perfect. Yes, it wipes my mind clean of stress and improves my mood every time I listen to it. Yes, they are probably the most relaxing band of all time, minus Minus the Bear (har har har...). But they lack depth, also a similarity to Minus the Bear, for those who care (I'm rhyming now beeotch). While with other albums that I consider amazing, godlike, masterpieces, I can listen to them over and over again and stll find new little shifts and swivles in the songs; slowly unfolding their true majesty to me. But El Cielo doesn't, the songs are pretty basic, you can absorb them in a few listens, and it just overall lacks the ambition that quite possibly could have elevated it to the status of one of my favourite albums.
Despite this I'd still recommend it to people who are interested in music. It sounds real purty and makes yer mind happeh.