One Step More and You Die

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (163 ratings)
ALBUM INFORMATION
EDITOR'S PICK

Total Tracks: 8   Total Length: 51:11

eMusic Review

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Tim Chester

eMusic Contributor

04.22.11
The masterpiece of Japan's finest purveyors of crescendo-core.
2003 | Label: Arena Rock Records

Formed at the turn of the millennium in Tokyo, Mono are Japan's best-known and arguably most accomplished practitioners of crescendo-core. They weren't born excellent, however. It's on this, their second album, where their creative partnership came of age. Head straight to "Com(?)" for a quarter of an hour of titanic noisemongering, which punctures quiet periods with monolithic walls of guitar noise, or "A Speeding Car," a track built on a volume gradient so long it covers pretty much every decibel level human ears can comprehend. A remixed version of album, featuring DJ Olive and Jackie-O Motherfucker was released a year after the original. This turned out to be a relatively quiet, ambient affair, which is interesting because One Step reaches some truly epic amplitude.

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High-hat

about a whole album download just use one credit to download Com(?) - it'll blow your brains out.

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not wrong

dancehallwraith

I'm usually a bit meh about post-rock but I took a chance with Com(?) and now I'm dribbling into my stripy jumper. It's fantastic!

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no mogwai, but not bad

themonobrow

Mono are often compared to Scottish guitar-noise wizards Mogwai, for the fact that both have a penchant for guitar-driven instrumentals. But where Mogwai are all about the drama and raw passion and at times pure rock, Mono are like their more tasteful, sedate, sensible-haircut sporting cousin: pleasant enough, but lacking something in the balls department. It is instrumental Jim, but not as Mogwai fans know it.

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BEAUTIFUL & BRUTAL!!!

endlessspiral

This music is like a woman that is gorgeous AND can kick your ass at the snap of a finger! A few tracks are very placid and tranquil soundscapes that give way to hurricanes of noise. Other tracks are straight up ambient with certain instruments bent slightly out of tune at interesting points in the track.The best approximation of the sound is something like Kinski, Mogwai, Sigur Ros and My Bloody Valentine mixed up in a blender. By the way, all tracks are instrumentals. No vocals! I can see why it's gotten 5 stars from so many people.

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wow.

tania

The whole record is mind-blowing, but if you listen to Com(?) first, you may never come back. If you like loud-soft-loud instrumental guitar rock that can really move you, this is it. That's a horse on the cover. really close up. and no, these aren't the brit-trip-hop people that had one album, they're really cool Japanese folks.

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nice instrumental

free-slave

DL-sabbath and/or a speeding car

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full blown noise peaks with beauty all around

sped

beautiful moments that will make your heart swell, ache and hope all at the same time. when the tempo increases and the crushing moments begin its like being in a hurricane of guitars and noise, wonderful. track #2 com(?) is the highlight and not to be missed, over 15 minutes of pure instrumental post-rock glory. and they're even better live!

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They Say All Media Guide

More structured and with a greater feel for dynamics than many Japanese noise rock releases, Mono’s One Step More and You Die shows that noise rock shouldn’t be afraid to explore quieter sonic spaces — in fact, the opening track, “Where Am I,” is downright pretty. Of course, that doesn’t last long. The next track, “Com(?),” builds from a similarly placid opening into a climax, nearly 16 minutes later, that sounds like Larks’ Tongues in Aspic-era King Crimson fed a steady diet of steroids and Red Bull, all crashing drums, clashing harmonics, and fragmented power chords. The album never quite gets to that level of ecstatic release again, but shorter tracks like “Mopish Morning, Halation Wiper” (which makes excellent use of an out of tune piano and guest cellist Udai Shika) and the slowly unfolding “A Speeding Car” smartly build an almost subliminal tension before quietly resolving. Akin to Mogwai, Larval, or Sonic Youth’s more delicate moments, One Step More and You Die is a phenomenal instrumental rock album. – Stewart Mason

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