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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Nothing forgettable about this
It's been over two years since The Twilight Sad gut punching debut "Fourteen Autumns & Fifteen Winters". In "Forget the Night Ahead", the band gets even darker, more cryptic, noisier and somewhat more melodic. In general, the style is not that far off their debut, the thing that has most significantly changed here is the mood. Some people have said they missed the...
Published on October 28, 2009 by TungstenBlues

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2 of 38 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars ...Had To Click One Star Just To Write This Thing
You can judge this book by it's covers. Crawl out from under them; Get Rehab; And then reassess what you want to do for a hobby. Just because a topic is scary, that doesn't make the lyric any good.

There are 2 five star reviews of this album in which the authors state:

1. "it's obvious the band didn't put this album together with the hopes of...
Published on October 13, 2009 by The Anti-Genius


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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Nothing forgettable about this, October 28, 2009
By 
This review is from: Forget the Night Ahead (Audio CD)
It's been over two years since The Twilight Sad gut punching debut "Fourteen Autumns & Fifteen Winters". In "Forget the Night Ahead", the band gets even darker, more cryptic, noisier and somewhat more melodic. In general, the style is not that far off their debut, the thing that has most significantly changed here is the mood. Some people have said they missed the accordion here. I don't think it's about the instrument per se, but the fact that this record has a different purpose. The sooner you understand that, it'll be a more rewarding experience to you as the listener. At first, I kept comparing it to FA&FW and I felt lost within it.

The lyrical themes are closer to missed opportunities, secrets and guilt. Not exactly the kind of stuff that would bring melancholy to your heart. Instead there's a lot of distortion and noise, but it's also clear they were looking to bring more variety to the mix. This can be best represented by the somewhat polar opposites of the album.

Opening track "Reflection of the Television" is full of tremolo guitars, pounding bass and drums all serving as a backdrop to surprisingly calm vocals. It perfectly captures the anxiety that surrounds a line as frightening as it its ambiguous, "There's people downstairs". It's clear they were looking to escape the somewhat expected explosion in the songs, so instead it slowly builds up tension until the last 30 seconds when it all becomes very sinister and the last "There's people downstairs" sounds like it was delivered from a deathbed.

A song like "The Neighbours Can't Breathe" is as tumultuous as it is exciting. With some very dark imagery that make the shifts in tempo feel a bit disturbing to be honest. It leaves you wondering about what's been left unsaid. There are also subtler moments like "The Room" - a haunting, mysterious and thrilling song that will make you feel guilty and shameful of something you can't even decipher; and "Floorboards Under the Bed", a very understatedly beautiful, evocative, and indeed, very sad song. The fact that they call pull all this off is what set this band apart, makes them so interesting and worthy of repetitive spins.

Even though, I've given it 5 stars, it's not actually "perfect". There seems to be some mismatched production, best exemplify by the vocals that sound clear and strong in a couple of tracks only to go back to being buried in the mix for others. Also, some of the details in the wall of sound have been mixed way lower than the rest of the elements. If you listen to the songs at low volume you will miss them. I'm pretty sure that was their intention, though.

By the way, thanks to that troll post who inspired me to write a real review.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Pretty much an amazing, natural catastrophe in your ears, October 3, 2009
This review is from: Forget the Night Ahead (Audio CD)
This album feels like a slow moving hurricane made up primarily of pain, grief, and fury; a lumbering, shrieking act of nature held right over your head; that heaviness on your chest that comes right after your love leaves you for good.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The Twilight Sad - Forget the Night Ahead, October 2, 2009
This review is from: Forget the Night Ahead (Audio CD)
The Twilight Sad are pissed, and they want you to know it. It's obvious that James Graham has been listening to his early Cure records lately, and it shows heavily throughout this album of dark, brooding, swirling tales of despair. Yes, this album is an epic downer, but it's also smart and musically rich, and will be loved by any fan of the band's work so far. It may be a little too bold to appeal to a wider audience, but it's obvious the band didn't put this album together with the hopes of drawing in legions of new fans: this is a record for the fans, and it's a great record.

Standouts for me are the brutal, hazy opener "Reflection of the Television" and it's more aggressive sister-song, "I Became a Prostitute." As you can no doubt tell by the titles, these songs are no joke, and the lyrics cover general themes of personal disgust, depression, and social anxiety. "The Room" is the closest the band gets to a ballad on this record, but it's far too disturbed and heavy to be a proper love song, but it's a strong, immediate track. As I said before, this is an album for the fans, and it's a great swirling mass of adult angst.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Please buy this, September 11, 2010
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Forget the Night Ahead (Audio CD)
If you like the Scottish noise scene or MBV or just want to hear an artsy, noisy take on stirring rock music, please buy this. These guys are fantastic. This and their earlier records deserve more attention than they've received. I find myself singing hauntingly in a Scottish brogue more and more these days because of this record. Oh to have been born in Glasgow!

The mix, the recording, the thickness, the delay, the feedback wash, the singer. All brilliant and all worth your attention. You will not regret this purchase.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars epic, bulding swells of melody & rage, November 12, 2009
This review is from: Forget the Night Ahead (Audio CD)
The 3rd release from this Glasgow, Scotland band is moody, muscular & melodic. Led by the
heady Scottish brogue of singer James Graham, these are gorgeous, epic, soaring songs
with a raw, beautiful & subtle sense of tension that swells from the basement of emotion, and
explodes into a raging barrage of skyward brilliance. Sometimes they do seem like a "one trick
pony", but oh-my-God what a trick!! Similarities to Airborne Toxic Event, My Bloody Valentine,
Glasvegas, We Were Promised Jetpacks, Xcerts.
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2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Great Band., December 24, 2009
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Richard (Baltimore, MD) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: Forget the Night Ahead (Audio CD)
Another very good CD, worth every penny. Not like other Bands were only one song on the CD is good.
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2 of 38 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars ...Had To Click One Star Just To Write This Thing, October 13, 2009
By 
This review is from: Forget the Night Ahead (Audio CD)
You can judge this book by it's covers. Crawl out from under them; Get Rehab; And then reassess what you want to do for a hobby. Just because a topic is scary, that doesn't make the lyric any good.

There are 2 five star reviews of this album in which the authors state:

1. "it's obvious the band didn't put this album together with the hopes of drawing in legions of new fans"
and
2."that heaviness on your chest that comes right after your love leaves you for good" (how would they know? If they left with any frequency before, they're obviously used to it.)

Wow, yeah, let's p' off everyone who'll put up with our carcass breath and then moan about it into a cheap mic. They managed to find 2 friends to write reviews and that's the best they could offer...

If there's an important message here, please make friends with or hire someone who can arrange and produce music and make it understandable and accessible. Amazon told me that people who bought Absolution by Muse also bought this. Just show's how useless statistics are. We've all bought produce and not noticed mold on it till we got home.

It's one of the most amateurish productions I've heard from the home recorded. If you didn't go to school to learn where to put a microphone, put some headphones on and move it around a little, or buy one that doesn't BUZZ when you get it close enough to something as loud as a withered human voice(which happens once in a while with electronic music). Learn how to gain stage your mixing board and stop using those cheap 2 channel DJ boards with the crappy built in effects.

Other than THAT it was ok... Xb 8O~
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Forget the Night Ahead
Forget the Night Ahead by The Twilight Sad (Audio CD - 2009)
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