Venice is Sinking - Sand & Lines: The Georgia Theater Sessions reviews

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   Pastemagazine
Venice is Sinking - Sand & Lines: The Georgia Theater Sessions reviewSand & Lines is a haunted album. It was recorded in Athens’ famed Georgia Theatre—and nudged into existence by Theater owner Wilmot “Wil” Greene, who volunteered the venue as studio space—a little more than a year before the venerable music house went up in flames in June 2009. Using Cowboy Junkies’ legendary Trinity Session as inspiration, the local dream-pop group set up camp around two microphones for four days, holding themselves to a live blueprint with no overdubs or extraneous studio effects. The result is somber, pastoral and startlingly visceral, capturing the careful chaos of their performances; Dense, soaked-wool guitar textures hang in the air over stately trumpets on their cover of Galaxie 500’s “Tugboat"; a cover of Dolly Parton’s “Jolene” delivers despondent violins, soft harmonies and crashing electric guitar. The Georgia Theatre may be in ashes, but its legacy will echo through the rafters every time this stunning live collection is played....full text

   Undertheradarmag
Recorded live in the empty Georgia Theatre on only two microphones over the course of four days in May of 2008, and with no editing or post production magic, Sand & Lines: The Georgia Theatre Sessions gives listeners the feeling of their own private concert from the totally underrated Venice is Sinking. It was masterminded by Wilmot "Wil" Greene and engineered by David Barbe (Drive-By Truckers, Sugar) and Andy Lemaster (Bright Eyes) around the time of Venice's last studio record (AZAR). It consists of only unreleased songs and super cool covers (Dolly Parton, Galaxie 500, Waylon Jennings). It's like stumbling in on amazing soundcheck by a band that is focused and sounding great. You can feel the size and warmth of the room but it's all for you....full text

   Tinymixtapes
A year and a half ago, I concluded my review of AZAR, the sophomore album from Athens indie pop group Venice Is Sinking, with the following words: “Despite its faults, AZAR certainly showcases a band with a keen ear for harmony and a willingness to push musical boundaries. I can only hope that future releases will find this band honing its strong points.” It’s an object lesson in the limits of critical speculation (or maybe just in the limits of my own critical speculations). AZAR was a ponderous, atmospheric chunk of chamber pop, rife with layered melodies and orchestral flourish. Sand and Lines, by contrast, is a stark, stripped-down affair, recorded in the now-defunct Georgia Theatre with only two microphones and no overdubbing. If anything, Venice Is Sinking took hold of the “strong points” that I singled out in my last review and chucked them into the waste basket, yet they’ve ended up with a record far more compelling than anything I could have envisioned for this band’s future.

The conceit behind the album makes comparisons with The Cowboy Junkies’ legendary Trinity Sessions inevitable. Like that formidable ancestor, Sand and Lines finds Venice Is Sinking exploring the roots of American music, particularly country, by sprinkling covers of Dolly Parton and Waylon Jennings amid twangy originals like album opener “Sidelights” and “Lucky Lady.” While the resulting album isn’t quite a statement on the level of Trinity, it’s notable for the amount of beauty it spins from such humble material. Whereas many bands use minimalist production values to hide their paucity of new ideas beneath swathes of tape-damage and feedback, Sand and Lines sounds as crisp and polished as any full studio effort, but gains immediacy from the live setting.

There’s plenty of good stuff here, but two songs are worth calling out for special attention. The first is “Bardstown Road.” It’s probably the simplest melody of the entire album, the instrumental backdrop consisting of little more than single-kick bass drum, two shakes of a sleigh bell, and the almost ambient hum of a church organ. The song builds toward a big-group vocal refrain at the end, and the strained quality of the band-members’ overlapping voices captures everything that’s wonderful about how this album was recorded in its final bittersweet minutes. The other MVP track on the album is their reimagining of Dolly Parton’s “Jolene.” By snatching the bass line from Black Sabbath’s “Planet Caravan” and grafting it onto the song, they effectively suck all the bounce out of Parton’s tried-and-true concert staple. In doing so, they lay bare the clawing desperation at the heart of the narrative and call into question the societal values that have reduced the female protagonist to such a state (and on an only tangentially related point, holy shit, check out her pants)....full text

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