The Evening Descends

Rate It! Avg: 4.0 (110 ratings)
ALBUM INFORMATION

Total Tracks: 11   Total Length: 45:10

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LOVE IT!

Izzyklassen

This is, by far, their best work yet. An incredibly full sound I haven't heard from many bands. The Evening Descends contains gems such as (1) The Evening Descends, (3)Skeleton Man, (4)Stoned Again and (9)Paperback Suicide the rest of the songs are still strong and as a whole the cd flows together well. Ive listened to this countless times now and I am still enjoying it as much as the first listen. Download this now stronnngggly recommended!!!!

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Unbelievably good!

Speculus

One of the top albums in my rotation, I play "Skeleton Man" nearly every day as I pull out of the parking lot at work! As one reviewer said, "The inmates have taken over the asylum and are writing songs".

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DOWNLOAD recommended

internationalpark

Too bad about some people's bad reviews. This album has been in my heavy rotation for awhile now. Great too-the-point rock and roll with a fun psychedelic-horror movie gooey center. Delectiable.

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Re: SnarkyMark

paultaylor_2009

It is unfortunate that you had such a bad experience with Evangelicals, Snarky. I saw them at Urbana-Champaign a couple months back and I had a very different encounter. I thought they performed very well and certainly did not have any quality issues regarding the sound. The album itself seems to be of a good quality but I will listen for it a bit more. Perhaps some of the sound distortion techniques they use are being mistaken for quality issues whereas in reality they are intended effects? (I should have an extensive review of this album out in a day or so!)

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Suckfest

SnarkyMark

This is the worst live show I've ever seen in my life. Their recorded music is only slightly better. If quality is important to you in your music-listening, don't waste your time here.

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incredibly interesting!

Ekko

Very eclectic indie rock.

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Solid, if a little flawed

Macky

There are some potentially instant classics on this record (get "Skeleton Man" now), coupled with some tracks that are a real mess stylistically. That might be your bag though. These guys remind me of Of Montreal in more than one way.

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billjack

qhavardii

I think every track is strong. Just really, really good!

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Bottom-Heavy

trs

First few tracks offer little to get excited about, but starting with Snowflakes, this album gets very strong and loses some of the contrived camp/horror sound effect hue of the first half. An exciting band makes an album that is more coherent and probably unique than their first. Recommended.

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They Say All Media Guide

On their second album, the Evangelicals continue in the vein of fragmented and openly loopy psychedelic pop/rock dementia that treasures silence and one or two instrument arrangements as much as full-on big-band rampage. Which is no bad thing, since a little of the latter can go a long way in the early 21st century. The “junior Flaming Lips” tag that the group has had since the start, due as much to the accident of geography in coming from Oklahoma as to the music, isn’t entirely going to disappear here, but unlike so many neo-Supertramps that have followed in Wayne Coyne’s wake, the Evangelicals strain a lot less in creating their whimsical songs. If anything, Animal Collective would be more of an obvious comparison, but the Evangelicals feel a little more straightforward than said group — if less inventive on the one hand, definitely less laden with overbearing expectations on the other. A number like “Midnight Vignette” plays around with Beach Boys harmonies as much as any other group these days, but the feeling is more of a woozy lounge jam, while the sudden focus and then spiraling silences of “Party Crashin’” are the band’s own creation. The demented laughter on the break for “Skeleton Man, ” the easygoing nearly spoken word start of “Stoned Again” — the most appropriate title for this kind of music and then some — and the muffled vocal mania on the increasingly more frenetic “Bellawood” are all treats, but somehow it’s the xylophone (if it is one) and singing on “Paperback Suicide” that sums up this album best, a winsome and not entirely stable treat. – Ned Raggett

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