...And You Will Know Us By The Trail Of Dead

Rate It! Avg: 4.0 (84 ratings)
...And You Will Know Us By The Trail Of Dead album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 8   Total Length: 39:47

Write a Review 2 Member Reviews

Please register before you review a release. Register

user avatar

Not Commercial Alternative

clincher12

Don't know who labeled Trail of Dead Commercial Alternative but they are anything but. Just because they wrote the album of the decade (Source Tag and Codes) does not make them Commercial Alternative. Nickleback = Commercial Alternative. Trail Of Dead = Beautiful/Angry Mistical/Dark Perfection

user avatar

believe the hype

velochef

this progressive noise rock out fit landed on my radar around '02. with weird name and huanting sound effects the three core members trade intrsuments and smash things. detuned guitars and layered rythem patterns are alot like sonic youth or at the drive in. this is their first album and while good you can hear they get much better very fast, see Madonna, the other album availble here. hard rocking and brilliant this is the only band that figured out how make heavymetalnoisepop into high art.

Recommended Albums

They Say All Music Guide

Labeled as “anti-musicians,” named after a prayer to Mayan corn gods, and cause for press releases describing it as “set upon by rednecks,” …And You Will Know Us by the Trail of Dead vies for that piece of scarred, post-punk real estate somewhere between the Who and chucking a whirring blender full of bolts straight into a jet engine. With this self-titled debut, the band will probably horrify the realtors. From moments of diversionary electronic tweaks to ones of shambolic, guitar-thrashed screeches (and sometimes both), the album realizes the importance of not trying to be important. The sound of bashing out unconventional “we hate something that we’ll make sure to mumble” punk rock without parroting any one musical thing is what — if anything — ties these eight songs together. And for good reason. Few bands can sound like such a rightful mess. The band has been lumped in with fellow rock unapologists Queens of the Stone Age and At the Drive-In, but this self-titled debut album is a caustic, fidgety yelp that almost belies its out-and-out intelligence. One of the band’s news stories might have said it best: “The band defended themselves with their instruments, which are now destroyed.” – Dean Carlson

more »