Before The Dawn Heals Us

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (28 ratings)
Before The Dawn Heals Us album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 15   Total Length: 61:08

eMusic Review 0

Avatar Image
Matthew Fritch

eMusic Contributor

05.18.11
The equivalent of a young indie filmmaker's first Hollywood blockbuster
2005 | Label: MUTE CATALOG

In 2001, Anthony Gonzalez and Nicolas Fromageau achieved cold fusion of synth pop and Casio symphonies in a bedroom studio in the idyllic French Riviera port town of Antibes. Their self-titled debut as M83 showed a studied appreciation for Brian Eno and Can and stirred up the shoegaze underground, but it was a mere preview for bigger productions to come. With their follow-up Dead Cities, Red Seas & Lost Ghosts, the duo explored a range of tonal colors previously known only to Claude Debussy and Kevin Shields, interlocking up to 20 keyboard parts on a single track.

If audiences embraced the group's cinematic qualities, consider 2005's Before the Dawn Heals Us a young indie filmmaker's first Hollywood blockbuster. With Fromageau absent and Gonzalez alone in the director's chair, Dawn goes supernova all over M83's formerly subdued melodies. The theremin choir on album opener "Moonchild" provides a four-and-a-half-minute godray, "Can't Stop" is a pop sugar packet swiped from the café table of fellow Frenchmen Phoenix, and "A Guitar and a Heart" sounds like a video game version of a hypnotic Queens of the Stone Age riff. A stickler for continuity and plot, Gonzalez sprinkles bits of dialogue (in… read more »

Write a Review 0 Member Reviews

Please register before you review a release. Register

Recommended Albums

eMusic Features

0

Label Profile: Mute Records

By Philip Sherburne, eMusic Contributor

File under: One of the richest (and most diverse) catalogs in independent music Flagship acts: Goldfrapp, Depeche Mode, Liars, Apparat, Erasure, S.C.U.M. Based in: London, England For an artist who adopted the moniker theNormal, Daniel Miller's life and career have been anything but. In 1978, he one-upped punk rock with an analog synthesizer: Since the keyboard required no musical knowledge whatsoever, he reasoned, it must be even more punk than an over-driven Gibson Les Paul. He founded his… more »

0

25 Bands to See at Coachella 2012

By eMusic Editorial Staff, eMusic Contributor

There is every other music festival and then there is Coachella, the California-desert weekend that, in many ways, set the template for all that followed. The first U.S. festival to boast big-ticket reunions and all-over-the-map booking, Coachella continues to maintain its distinctive, idiosyncratic personality. Needless to say, navigating such a wide array of music can be tricky. We've picked 25 acts worth making time for. more »

0

eMusic Q&A: M83

By Amelia Raitt, eMusic Contributor

On his fifth album (sixth, if you count ambient dalliance Digital Shades, Vol. 1), Anthony Gonzalez — the prime mover behind widescreen synthpop act M83 — goes all-in, crafting a sprawling double-album built on the kind of surrealist fairy tale plotline that typically powers Michel Gondry films. Taking place inside the parallel dreams of a brother and a sister, Hurry Up We're Dreaming often feels like a road movie set on Mars. The album boasts… more »

They Say All Music Guide

Before the Dawn Heals Us is M83′s follow-up to the 2003 international breakthrough Dead Cities, Red Seas & Lost Ghosts. If you’re noticing a trend toward drifting album titles, that’s deliberate — M83 mastermind Anthony Gonzalez loves crafting antigravity masterpieces of layered and meandering synthesizers. He’s also the principal player on Dawn, with previous collaborator Nicolas Fromageau having moved into solo work. Left to his own devices, Gonzalez has made a more cohesive record than Dead Cities. As nice as they were, that album’s synthesized soundscapes tended to drift into a foggy territory between Boards of Canada and Tangerine Dream. Dawn remedies that with the addition of vocals, more consistent beats, and a cinematic pace. “Teen Angst” and “Don’t Save Us From the Flames” pin gorgeous melodies to an indie electronic sound comparable to the Notwist; “Flames” in particular is a great departure, roaring out of the gate with giddy drum fills and an oscillating keyboard squiggle. “Farewell/Goodbye” is an icy, Air-ish duet between Ben of Cyann & Ben and Big Sir vocalist Lisa Papineau; it’s not the most effective thing on Before the Dawn Heals Us, but it works as a love theme to the imaginary Michael Mann film Gonzalez seems at times to be directing. (Check out that cover art.) The album also has its stretches of instrumental wander. “I Guess I’m Floating,” for example, features a scattered sample of children’s laughter over lingering keyboard flourishes. But Gonzalez never gets carried away on the breeze — he’ll set a mood, but he’ll cut it wide open, too. “Let Men Burn Stars” is a breathy and innocuous lull before the recording’s most intense passage, “Car Chase Terror.” “Look at my hands, I’m shaking….” a woman (actress Kate Moran) says over the hiss of crickets, her words tense with fear. A moody electronic pulse fades in, and suddenly you’re in the midst of the chase, narrated by the same scared voice — “Turn the key! Go! Go!” — and the melody is melodramatic and terrifying all at once. Before the Dawn Heals Us is ambitious for sure, an emphatic step forward from the linger of Dead Cities. But it might also be a transition album for Gonzalez, a storyboard of where he’ll take M83 next. – Johnny Loftus

more »

Activity