The Twilight Singers – A Stitch in Time

Chemical Burn Part 1

It don’t matter / when you turn / gonna survive / live and learn, rumbles Mark Lanegan against a steady electric scale. A fitting gateway into Greg Dulli’s post-grunge rock of the Twilight Singers, Lanegan (frequent collaborator of Queens of the Stone Age, former Screaming Trees vocalist) calmly sings with conviction, “I’ve been thinking ’bout you baby / come live with me.” This song – a stellar cover of Massive Attack’s “Live With Me” – bursts forth with mounting energy. An alarm-like noise reverberates just under the fray when things ease, while Dulli provides raspy backup vocals to the incendiary refrain “Nothing’s right / without you here / I’ll give all that I have / just to keep you near.” Delving away from the trip-hop leanings of the original, this brilliant rendition deserves the rare accolade of “As good, if not better than the original” a la Jimi Hendrix’s “All Along the Watchtower.” This is just one track of five on the Twilight Singers’ new EP A Stitch in Time.Lanegan (who is now listed as a band member on their myspace page) can also be heard on the bass-heavy spy-groove “Flashback.” He and former Afghan Whig Dulli trade off vocal lines displaying chemistry that could fool a layman into thinking the two had been singing side-by-side for years. Again, the song grows in power and weight without increasing tempo, merely through enticing melodic manipulations slowly evolved as the tune progresses. Singer-songwriter Joseph Arthur also contributes a lush falsetto to the sunny “Sublime.”

A Stitch in Time concludes with soulful folk ballad “The Lure Would Prove Too Much.” Acoustic strums set the tone as Dulli sways in peaceful croon to-and-fro. Once the structure is set, the song meanders off into a beautiful outro accompanied by charming answering machine messages. It’s an elastic tunefulness that serves The Twilight Singers well here, and in their live performances.

Raymond Flotat: Editor-in-Chief / Founder mxdwn.com || Raymond Flotat founded mxdwn.com in 2001 while attending University of the Arts in Philadelphia while pursuing a B.F.A. in Multimedia. Over his career he has worked in variety of roles at companies such as PriceGrabber.com and Ticketmaster. He has written literally hundreds of pieces of entertainment journalism throughout his career. He has also spoken at the annual SXSW Music and Arts Festival. When not mining the Internet for the finest and most exciting art in music, movies, games and television content he dabbles in LAMP-stack programming. Originally hailing from Connecticut, he currently resides in Los Angeles. ray@mxdwn.com
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