Gold

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Gold album cover
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EDITOR'S PICK

Total Tracks: 10   Total Length: 50:03

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Jon Wiederhorn

eMusic Contributor

Jon Wiederhorn is a senior editor at Revolver, a regular freelancer for Guitar World and SPIN and the co-author of the upcoming book "Louder Than Hell: The Unce...more »

04.22.11
An album just ahead of the newgazing curve.
2003 | Label: Unit Circle Rekkids / CD Baby

This southern California band's stated motto is "atmosphere, arrangement, sound, layering and noise." Its third album, Gold, should thrill anyone seeking these qualities. It boasts the cosmic showers of Slowdive, the underwater undulations of My Bloody Valentine and the fragile melodies of Pale Saints. But while the sounds are derivative, the songs vibrate with discovery and, for the first time, the band seems in complete control over its echoing instruments. While this album came ahead of the newgazing curve, it found a niche audience and became an influential force in the evolution of the genre. In later years, Bethany Curve would add more conventional melodies and dynamics to its songs, but for fans of glistening ethereal textures, this one's pure Gold.

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Groovy

jef

Nice layers, good melodies, and a great voice...Time to get a new drum machine or a real drummer. Flat snare sound and bass drum...from your local drum tech.

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Modern Shoegazers and Pedal Pushers

By Jon Wiederhorn, eMusic Contributor

For a while, we stared at the ground without a care for where we were going or what was coming our way. Shoegazing was in full swing, and the wobbly guitars and sleepy vocal harmonies from bands such as Chapterhouse, Ride and Slowdive were the soundtracks to a blanched world of beauty and self-absorption. Between 1990 and 1994, this psychedelic permutation of pop became one of the leading indie rock scenes in England and developed… more »

They Say All Music Guide

Bethany Curve’s third album, Gold, finds the band building on their considerable strengths. While the fivesome still remain squarely in the post-shoegazer camp, their abilities seem only to grow stronger with time. “Drag,” the album’s monstrous opener, is their best number yet. With its yearning, commanding vocals, explosive build-and-release atmospherics, and deeply echoed guitar drones and wails, the song achieves a pure, powerful beauty rivaling the very best of Slowdive or even My Bloody Valentine. If nothing else on the album quite reaches the Elysian heights of “Drag,” the band still come awfully close more than once: “Fold in the Floor” has more huge, majestic guitar squalls; “Over and Out” balances a thrashy main hook and forceful drums with blissed-out feedback; and “Strength” begins with various strange crumbling noises before a series of lovely guitar washes float up through the mix and take over. Meanwhile, the album closes on a killer note with “Marasmus,” a long jam with sharp drumming, droning vocal chants, and a palpable sense of massed psychedelic power. – Ned Raggett

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