Infinite Light

Rate It! Avg: 4.0 (682 ratings)
ALBUM INFORMATION
EDITOR'S PICK

Total Tracks: 10   Total Length: 35:03

eMusic Review

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Andria Lisle

eMusic Contributor

08.03.09
Black Mountain alumni dial back the fuzz rock for wobbly, warbly westerns
Label: Jagjaguwar / SC Distribution

Much like Athens, Georgia's much-ballyhooed Elephant 6 collective, Black Mountain Army is altering the soundscape of Vancouver, Canada one band at a time. The army's newest progeny, Lightning Dust, serves as the antithesis of psych-rock band (and critics' darlings) Black Mountain: here, Black Mountain alumni-turned Lightning Dust balladeers Amber Webber and Joshua Wells dial back the sturm und drang (or, more appropriately, wail und fuzz) for a restrained, yet no less impassioned delivery.

Infinite Light, Lightning Dust's second album, delves into a folksy, Americana song bag that's sewn from scraps of the Band's Music From Big Pink, the Felice Brothers' Tonight at the Arizona, and the Geraldine Fibbers' Lost Somewhere Between the Earth and My Home. Webber's warble sounds part Carla Bozulich, part Kasey Chambers, while Wells channels Lee Hazlewood and a dash of Johnny Cash. Stripped of most electric instrumentation, they duet on “Honest Man,” which could be an outtake from Silver Jews' Tanglewood Numbers, then play on western stereotypes for “Waiting on the Sun to Rise,” an echo-laden country waltz. They're no retro act, however: Jarring percussions and synthesizers occasionally disrupt the reverie, as on the galloping “I Knew,” “Never Seen,” and “The Times.”

Lightning Dust… read more »

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Completely Amazing

electrotechfunk

Pretty damn near flawless, beautiful work. Imagine Mazzy Star or Cowboy Junkies, except the songwriting is improved tenfold. Amber Webber's quivering voice might bug some people, but if you really listen, you can't help but be amazed by it.

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Nice and sweet

nicolas.loeuille

but with an edge, due to her strange and immediately recognizable voice. You'll love it or hate it...

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Grows On You

MKayC

You've got to have a thing for unique voices to truly love this album. But if you can embrace Amber Webber's voice, then you've got some interesting atmospheric music ahead of you.

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Vibrato

retropuss

I would love it if Amber's vocals weren't so affected. The vibrato seems to work on the Black Mountain records because it mixes in with the wall of sound. But, when it's more stripped down it tends to sound contrived. As with some other albums with great songs and semi-annoying vocals, I might get used to the unusual vocal stylings. We will see.

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Remarkable

Geobabe

Just what I needed- new music that captured my ear and mind, and will not let go.

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Trust the Editor's

EMUSIC-01F47AF7

...to pick another wonderful album. Love the lyrics and the sound. I searched for the band members names and found this on MySpace...Amber Webber and Joshua Wells, sometimes with Ashley Webber, Ryan Peters, Fish Tacos and the odd Cave Singer.

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Let Fall begin

sevenbaby87

I've found my Fall 2009 album. Beautiful stuff here.

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Salvador Dali

Kerry

The cover's color palette reminds me so much of Salvador Dali's paintings. I haven't listened to the album. I intend to. But I just had to say something about the cover where someone could see it.

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Single Alert!

ErikSpringfield

"Wondering what Everyone Knows" is well written, mysterious, catchy and looks destined to stay in my iPod rotation for quite some time. Check it out!

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Cool, melodic hum along

ottozap

Black Mountain alums are cool, calm and melodic on their second effort. A great summer album.

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eMusic Features

Who Are…Lightning Dust?

By Andria Lisle

With the release of their sophomore effort, Infinite Light, what started as a side project now nearly overshadows Webber and Wells' day jobs as members of '70s-influenced Canadian rock band Black Mountain. As a duo, Lightning Dust straddle a space-time continuum that encompasses pop culture touchstones like Nancy Sinatra and Lee Hazlewood circa 1968's, left-of-center hit "Some Velvet Morning." eMusic's Andria Lisle caught up with Webber and Wells by phone from Vancouver.


On developing… more »