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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars hang on to your seats, it's the Trail of Dead!
I was a substitute teacher about 10 years ago and had the pleasure (?) of taking a 'special' class of hyperactive kids to an assembly on Valentines Day, AFTER they'd gotten amped on candy.

AYWKUBTTOD are just like those kids - the world of music is their playground, and once onstage they just CAN'T KEEP STILL. At the first live show I saw (before this lovely gem was...

Published on December 28, 2000 by Michael Heminger

versus
3 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars This band is great but
the recording on this record is terrible! Where was this recorded? A concrete bunker? A tin can? Behind a three foot wall of mud? If you want to know how this band should sound, listen to Source Tags. The recording on this one almost kills it. I really do dig this band though and these songs would be great..
Published on April 26, 2004


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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars hang on to your seats, it's the Trail of Dead!, December 28, 2000
I was a substitute teacher about 10 years ago and had the pleasure (?) of taking a 'special' class of hyperactive kids to an assembly on Valentines Day, AFTER they'd gotten amped on candy.

AYWKUBTTOD are just like those kids - the world of music is their playground, and once onstage they just CAN'T KEEP STILL. At the first live show I saw (before this lovely gem was released) they broke a snare drum on the first song, and were shocked when another local band lent them a drum (bands in their native Austin know better). I remember drummer/guitarist/singer #2, Jason, walking offstage in mid-set and twirling around on the floor on one arm, as if to stir up the crowd like a human blender. These guys have a lot of energy to release, and usually take it out on their arsenal of equipment that knows it lives on borrowed time.

Sonically, this band makes an undeniable nod to the great Sonic Youth era where beautiful noisescapes were barely contained within 'song' frameworks. The Trail of Dead boys have done their homework, and offer a storybook of consistently mesmerizing works of sheer power and pensive grace.

In the album's opener, they get their manifesto right out there, ("This is a riot, right??") as if to warn the timid to hang on dearly. Then "Novena Without Faith" proves just how many gears of the rock machine these guys have mastered with a mellow, yet driving, dreamy quality. Check out the sound byte enclosed here of "Fake Fake Eyes" to hear how much territory they can seamlessly cover in 30 seconds.

Their albums can be addicting for the sheer force of the moods they create, particularly in "Gargoyle Waiting" which sounds like one of them took up residence atop a cathedral in December. The album draws to a close with a sneaky bang on "Ounce of Prevention", creeping in on a one-note wail and building into a frenzied wall of teen angst.

High-quality rock fury and craft that has not been touched since Sonic Youth decided to be a cutesy art band.

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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Take It All At Once, February 20, 2005
By 
Marc Redshaw (Peoria, IL USA) - See all my reviews
I'll have to admit that the first time I tried to give this album a listen, I was anything but impressed. The first song ("Richter Scale Madness) seems to just be a badly produced homage to punk, and the second song ("Novena Without Faith") sounds like it was ripped right out of Sonic Youth's "Bad Moon Rising." I think I took it out of my CD player sometime in the middle of track number three.
I got home later that night and popped it in, again. And again, I was unimpressed. I spaced out for a while, and then all of a sudden I was hit by the sonic explosion of "Prince With A Thousand Enemies." My mouth was hanging open, I remember thinking something along the lines of "what in the hell just happened?" I listened to that song around twenty times in a row before I finally let it continue on to "Ounce of Prevention." And it happened again, pure sonic terror. The dissonant opening and the punk hued drums, the shouted vocals, the terror, the terror.
The whole deal about this album is definitely in how it builds. This isn't one that you buy for a few songs because everything is made so much more by the listening to of the whole.
I suggest this and any other ...Trail of Dead (save maybe "Worlds Apart") for anyone who heard Sonic Youth's "Sister" or "Daydream Nation" and was only left craving more. A truly jarring listen.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The beginning of a truly great rock band..., February 4, 2005
By 
Jon B. "Filmmaker" (San Francisco, CA United States) - See all my reviews
People have complained about the production value of this album. That when played it sounds real quiet as if music is being played in the other room or something. All you have to do is turn it up louder than you would with most CD's, it appears there's just a problem in the digital levels of the CD.

That aside, this album is just awesome, it rocks, it's seminal Trail of Dead. If you love their newer albums, you'll love this album just as much. No matter what other idiots might think, this band is one of the most original sounding rock groups out there and with their great musical knowledge, talent and skills as artists I doubt that will change.

See them live and hear these songs played again as if they were brand new, you'll have a whole new opinion of the band.
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4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars NME online review, August 24, 2000
By 
ancil (Green Springs, OH United States) - See all my reviews
since nobody has found any reviews helpful here is NME's review

JIM JARMUSCH WOULD surely be intrigued. After all, it isn't every week that a band turns up from Austin, Texas via Olympia and Hawaii with a moniker ten words long which implies much shadowy miserablism going down in the spooky ol' Midwest. Either that, or we're about to uncover Cradle Of Filth's long lost cousins of symphonic carnage...

Fear not, kids of popness: And You Will Know Us By The Trail Of Dead are actually four well-turned out chaps with uniform mod crops and biographical details along the lines of "a self-contained destruction unit". They made their live debut in 1995, this is their first ever album, and against several odds it rocks like a raccoon on a snowboard.

For Yankophile thrill-seekers the globe over, Sonic Youth and Afghan Whigs are the most obvious reference points lurking within the likes of 'Richter Scale Madness' and 'When We Begin To Steal' respectively. From Da Yoof they purloin searing guitars; from Les Whigs they adopt that mixture of menace and pathos, captured within the audacious sprawl of 'Novena Without Faith' which fizzles for eight-and-a-half minutes.

Of course, size isn't everything. Many of these eight tracks are content to whiplash in around the classic three-minute mark, although the majority are probably a tad too whacked-out for mass consumption. On 'Fake Fake Eyes' AYWKUBTTOD (cheers!) make like Urusei Yatsura's dads; during 'Prince With A Thousand Enemies' you could swear they were parodying Placebo's 'Bruise Pristine'; 'When We Begin To Steal' is quite, quite lovely, climaxing in a mosquito dub storm. And the rest scrambles past with varying degrees of foxiness, niftiness and a few other words that rhyme with 'bloody marvellous musical mess'.

Which is nice.

8/10 Simon Williams

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Great debut, March 13, 2009
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: ...And You Will Know Us by the Trail of Dead [Vinyl] (Vinyl)
...And You Will Know Us By The Trail Of Dead was arguably the best rock band in America for a few years back around the turn of the century. It's been a while, but looking back at their first two albums, this was a great studio band as well as a phenomenally great live band. Noisy, dark, smart, epic rock songs that flow together seamlessly. Highly recommended; A classic indeed.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Love this Vinyl...great band!, January 19, 2012
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: ...And You Will Know Us by the Trail of Dead [Vinyl] (Vinyl)
Item in excellent condition and new as promised. This is one of my favorite bands. I love their music! They are a great band live, and they sound great on vinyl.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Even better than Source Tags and Codes, December 25, 2009
This is a really great album. This album works so well as a whole. The actual sound quality isn't as good as their latter records but personally i think it gives it a nice lo-fi sound as well as add to the rawness of the record. I think this is their strongest record because it just does a really great job of capturing the energy and talent of a young band with a unique sound.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Strong Foundation, November 18, 2008
By 
Very hard to label this band. They have both an '80s sound and a '90s sound about them. Some songs are avant garde, while others are commercial. The two drums give many songs a nice kick. I went out and bought several of their other CDs after getting this one.
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4.0 out of 5 stars Decent Beginnings, January 1, 2008
It's not as good as some of their later stuff, but Trail of Dead's self-titled debut is still a pretty solid album. An influence that I really didn't expect to see was Sonic Youth, but it seems like it's there. You could have told me portions of it were B-Sides from Daydream Nation and I'd probably believe you. But while I found problems with that album's sprawling nature, this was more compact as an experience. There is a song that's over eight minutes, but it never gets boring. This was back when they were most famous for their chaotic live shows, and obviously you don't really get that on a studio album. But it's still pretty solid hard rock. You can see some signs of the band they'll eventually turn into, and some legitimately entertaining moments.

"Richter Scale Madness" starts with some random noises before a catchy, Daydream-esque song begins. "Novena Without Faith" is the long one, mixing distant, whispered vocals with a good melody that rises and falls in intensity. "Half of What" has a nice, driving beat. The closing song, "When We Begin to Steal..." is another good mix of wandering softness and imprecise, passionate loudness, and brings it to a close. I really don't have much else to say about it, other than it's a nice album that shows the beginnings of a good band.
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3 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars "a cold wind (contempt) blows", January 17, 2005
what it is, is self explanitary, its music. it sounds. wheres the use in analysing things as plain and as familiar as sounds?. dont degrade the beauty of music by tearing it apart and putting it back togeather again, just let it infect you.

what i also dont do is compare this album to their most recent, for it travels in a completely different (although not intentionally different) direction.
None of this "a real trail of dead fan would..." rubbish please, how masturbatory can you get!?

The lack of production conveys the tone, nihlism. thats allegedly what "sources codes and tags" strives for too, keep in mind.

they sound like different bands to me, theres something beneath the music on this album conveyed by the flawed mixings, i think this endearing quality has been lost somewhere along the way. misconstued concepts due to a loss of a band member.

its not contempt for "sources..." i feel, only irritation. for it is clearly prioritised over their very early opus.
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...And You Will Know Us by the Trail of Dead [Vinyl]
...And You Will Know Us by the Trail of Dead [Vinyl] by And You Will Know Us By The Trail Of Dead (Vinyl - 2009)
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