Create account Log in

It All Falls Apart

[Edit]

Download links and information about It All Falls Apart by The Sight Below. This album was released in 2010 and it belongs to Electronica, Techno, Jazz, Dancefloor, Dance Pop, Alternative genres. It contains 8 tracks with total duration of 54:58 minutes.

Artist: The Sight Below
Release date: 2010
Genre: Electronica, Techno, Jazz, Dancefloor, Dance Pop, Alternative
Tracks: 8
Duration: 54:58
Buy on iTunes $9.99
Buy on Songswave €1.55

Tracks

[Edit]
No. Title Length
1. Shimmer 6:14
2. Fervent 5:08
3. Through the Gaps In the Land 9:21
4. Burn Me Out From the Inside 6:06
5. It All Falls Apart 4:36
6. New Dawn Fades (feat. Tiny Vipers) 5:18
7. Stagger 13:13
8. Splénétique (Bonus Track) 5:02

Details

[Edit]

Rafael Anton Irisarri’s first album as the Sight Below was titled after a My Bloody Valentine EP. Two of its songs happened to share titles with songs by the Verve and Ride. The connection between It All Falls Apart and shoegaze runs deeper: Simon Scott, who played drums in the Charlottes and Slowdive, provides “guitars, treatments, and electronics” on three songs, co-writing and co-producing two of them with the Pacific Northwest producer. Not merely another album of impeccably made ambient thump-and-drone, It All Falls Apart improves upon the exceptional debut in that it is more evocative and less insular, with a sense of openness that is far more comforting than alienating. Only two songs — back to back, in the middle of the sequence — carry that muffled Gas-eous pulse-rhythm heard on Glider, and even those are elegantly downcast, graced with layers of deceptively contrasting guitar-generated drones that can create states of anxious bliss and becalmed terror (to such an affecting extent that Irisarri could have justifiably swiped the title of the Verve's first album, A Storm in Heaven). A slow-motion, almost motionless, rendering of Joy Division's “New Dawn Fades,” featuring pitched-down-sounding vocals from Jesy Fortino (Tiny Vipers), resembles a Velvet Underground & Nico ballad heard through wind-tunnel squall. “A change of speed, a change of style” takes on a literal meaning here.