Priest = Aura

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (61 ratings)
ALBUM INFORMATION

Total Tracks: 14   Total Length: 64:52

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Paradoxically, quite possibly their best

CANTBELIEVEIMPAYINGFORTHISCRAP

I own just about every Church CD. I like or love most of them, at least pre-1994. But when it comes to "Priest=Aura", I absolutely melt. How shocking that post-"Under The Milky Way" and post-"Metropolis", the band would fall off the MTV/120 Minutes radar and yet still deliver their most compelling, cohesive, and overpowering record 3 years after everyone stopped paying attention? You want mood, you got it (Ripple). You want romance, you got it (Paradox). You want driving rock, you got it (Kings, probably my favorite track). I could go on, but why waste more bytes praising this underappreciated masterpiece?

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Otherworldly

johnnic428

It took me a while to come to terms with this album and as the years have gone by I've realized this is one of their coolest recordings. This album isn't just a collection of songs, its a journey to some other world and the first track takes you there immediately. Balanced from beginning to end, no single track breaks the mood of the overall experience (unlike Russian Autumn Heart from GAF or Chromium from AENT). This is no Starfish but stands on its own imho. A self contained mystical experience with deep layers of sound, sometimes clear and crystal othertimes thick and chaotic that I come back to many times a year. Favorite albums - After Everything Now This / Priest = Aura / Starfish (of course) / Heyday

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Perfect

casperthegoth-1

It takes a while to digest and understand it all, both musically and lyrically, but this album is one of my very few "perfect albums." If you like the Church at all, you probably already know it, and it is a bit hard to recommend to someone who isn't familiar with them. It is very deliberate and mellow. If you like the first Interpol album, and don't mind someone who can sing, give this a shot, but know that it is even more mellow.

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They Say All Media Guide

Probably the most obscure album title yet from the Church, and definitely one of the least likely to provide a catchy radio single, but with this defiant reclaiming of their own destiny after the mess of Gold Afternoon Fix, the Church came up with its best album to date. If not as gloriously catchy as Heyday, Priest = Aura shows the Church fully in charge of creating evocative, poetic, and gripping music with a distinctly unsettling edge. Part of the strength of Priest = Aura is its excellent sequencing, organized from start to finish. The opening song, “Aura,” finds the band coming in after an atmospheric synth start, Kilbey’s sly lyric equally applicable to the band’s recent situation and standing as a cryptic invocation of strange experiences away from home. “Ripple,” which immediately follows, was the lead single, its soothing chorus floating above a strong, shadowy undertow of music below. With that as a start, everything continues up until the album’s wrenching conclusion, starting with the dramatic, unnerving music hall chant of “The Disillusionist.” After a brief break with “Old Flame,” “Chaos” kicks in, a nearly ten-minute invocation of the title subject. Willson-Piper and Koppes rarely have sounded so powerful, while the final song, “Film,” doesn’t provide much further comfort. In between these two extremes, many other great songs — “Swan Lake,” with its portrait of a hellish home, the gentle dance-groove of “Feel,” “Kings” and its epic U2-done-right feel and more — fill out this astonishing album. – Ned Raggett

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