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Street Dogs - State of Grace

In First Person

Lost Between Hands Held Tight
2006
Paramnesia

In First Person - Lost Between Hands Held Tight (Cover Artwork)


Review by: Brian
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Paramnesia Records (link)

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Published on January 12th 2007

While this quaint little three-piece from Philadelphia, PA contains ex-members of You and I, the Assistant and A Petal Fallen, what really caught my eye is an even more obscure band listed in their pedigree: Pyramids. A couple of you might remember some lavish praise I gave to that particularly stunning act, and how I named their album the best released last year. So naturally I was pretty excited to give In First Person’s Lost Between Hands Held Tight a loving spin. And while just hearing Benn Roe’s perfectly panicked, distressing voice would probably be enough for me, the veteran chops of his bandmates are always there to make sure I’m in good Hands.

Additionally, while In First Person certainly play a similarly abrasive style of raw, yet focused emotional hardcore, they’re no Pyramids Part II. Pyramids’ chillingly breathtaking post-rock somberness is traded in for thick, choking, heavily intense offerings, like "Kanye West Was Right" (which does actually make direct talk about and criticism of the government’s slow reaction to Katrina). That song in particular shows a complex vocal interplay involving drummer Vanessa Espinal in a similar vein to Circle Takes the Square -- this release of anxiety also collapses upon the end of the disc in "Deconstructing the I/It," and it sounds great. She also lends some lead talents to the keyboard-tinged, much more relaxed "...And Time Is Running Out," which sounds a little like what would happen if portions of Boys Night Out’s Trainwreck was given the Gravity Records touch. Or maybe it’s more of a cross between 1905’s flexibility and Nakatomi Plaza’s dynamic chemistry.

What’s great is, instead of rehashing Benn Roe’s other band’s way of offsetting intensity -- channeling Envy’s ethereal post-rock instrumentals -- that’s how they do it on Hands: with sweet female vocals, or in the case of the aforementioned "Deconstructing the I/It," temporarily sweeping guitars and pulsating basslines (I’m thinking middle-era On the Might of Princes here). And when they choose the "no bullshit" approach, it’s pretty serious; "Alfred Hitchcock" seriously pounds with a meaty hardcore stomp á la 108. But no how matter how the intensity is pent up, delivered, and reflected upon, it’s always varied, and always impressive, especially with repeated listens.

The Beast
Alfred Hitchcock

STREAM
Kanye West Was Right
Deconstructing the I/It




People who liked this also liked:
Various - Take Action! Volume 6 [2-CD/DVD]Vaux - Beyond Virtue, Beyond ViceMxPx - Let It Happen [Deluxe Edition] [CD/DVD]The Blood Brothers - Young MachetesRevive - Beliefs of an Old PastDntel - Dumb LuckVarious - Plea for Peace Volume 2Nakatomi Plaza - UnsettledSorry No Ferrari - The Get Down SyndromeAchilles - Hospice



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    Posted by SilentStorms on 2007-01-17 09:51:10
    My Score:

    Never heard of them, but I love those other bands (assistant/you and i) so I HAVE to check this out. Wow this is fucking sweet, and it sounds a lot like This Ship Will Sink.

    Posted by Anonymous on Saturday, January 13, 2007 at 3:37 AM (EST)

    One should buy this just because the Lp version is so ridiculously nice and comes with the cd as well. Also a good band overall.

    Posted by nicodemus on 2007-01-12 16:44:38

    A hearty hell yes for progressive (socially, not like "prog rock") bands making rad songs.

    Posted by mpc on 2007-01-12 10:06:01
    My Score:

    This is really good... sounds like it would be at home on the Level Plane roster.