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Alpinisms
 
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Alpinisms

School of Seven Bells (Artist)
4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (11 customer reviews) More about this product


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Product Details

  • Audio CD (October 28, 2008)
  • Original Release Date: October 28, 2008
  • Number of Discs: 1
  • Label: Ghostly Int'l
  • ASIN: B001CVMDF6
  • Also Available in: Audio CD  |  Vinyl  |  MP3 Download
  • Average Customer Review: 4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (11 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.com Sales Rank: #29,565 in Music (See Bestsellers in Music)

 
1. Iamundernodisguise
2. Face to Face on High Places
3. Half Asleep
4. Wired for Light
5. For Kalaja Mari
6. White Elephant Coat
7. Connjur
8. Sempiternal/Amaranth
9. Chain
10. Prince of Peace
11. My Cabal

Editorial Reviews

Product Description

School of Seven Bells' full-length debut, Alpinisms, is best introduced with a little etymology: Mercurial French author Rene Daumal defined 'alpinism' as 'the art of climbing mountains.' Alpinists are both athletes and mystics. They practice 'pure' climbing, hands gripping the cragged incline sans rope or guide, forcing their bodies ever-upward in the name of earthly enlightenment. 'Alpinisms,' says Daumal enthusiast and guitarist Alejandra Deheza, 'are mountain-climbing songs.' Alpinism is an electronically enhanced Pop record of dizzying highs and claustrophobic lows, whose painstaking conception shows in its detail-laden crevices. On the album's best tracks 'the polyrhythmic dream-pop' of 'Face to Face in High Places'.

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11 Reviews
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 (6)
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 (4)
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 (1)
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Average Customer Review
4.5 out of 5 stars (11 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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17 of 17 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Alpinisms, November 26, 2008
By Mike Newmark (Tarzana, CA United States) - See all my reviews
  
Alpinisms is School of Seven Bells' first CD, but the band members are hardly strangers to music. The guitarist is one Benjamin Curtis, the same guitarist who famously left Secret Machines in 2007 before they produced the stiffest album in their catalogue. Twin sisters Claudia and Alejandra Deheza, the band's vocalists, were singers for the New York City post-punk outfit On!Air!Library!--which sounded as though they'd accidentally stumbled into Fugazi's studio on the way to see the Postal Service. And Claudia Deheza once holed up with Prefuse 73's Guillermo Scott Herren for a sensual, ethnically ambiguous one-off as A Cloud Mireya. Once the personnel found each other (while opening for Interpol) and School of Seven Bells was set in motion, they released two 7" records and collaborated with Prefuse 73 on his EP The Class of 73 Bells in what seemed like an attempt to figure out just what in the heck kind of band they wanted to be.

With Alpinisms, we get an answer: They want to be a dream-pop band. But that's not as simple as it appears on the surface, since modern day dream-pop can subsume shoegaze, twee-pop, and indie electronica, and School of Seven Bells incorporate all of those elements--the cascading guitars, the programmed beats, the sugary melodies grafted from the early `90s that will always remind me of licking a lollipop. It's a sound that, when executed well enough, can cause even the most fair-weather listener to go weak at the knees. School of Seven Bells hit the sweet spot with enough frequency to make Alpinisms worthwhile, and though not every experiment works, it should give those who have been following these musicians around some satisfaction to realize that this is the sort of album they've been waiting so long to create.

School of Seven Bells may have been Curtis's idea, but Alpinisms presents as a Deheza twins vehicle, with Curtis providing an unobtrusive instrumental ballast that borders on egoless. Alejandra and Claudia are so in tune with their own songs, you can practically feel the telepathy operating in their cadences. All of them share songwriting credits, and together they steer the ship in some gorgeous directions. "Connjur" finds the sisters harmonizing like birds gliding higher and lower in the sky, above some Stones-y guitar, a crisp, driving rhythm and a heavenly drone. "Chain" is pure pop confectionery, a twee-pop throwback that makes excellent use of a vocoder. But even more striking is when the song emerges from the sound like cold water splashed in the face. In "For Kalaja Mari", one of the twins sings with forceful clarity, "Walk with me for a while to my house on the hill / Forget where your body lies and I'll forget mine as well / And you have as much hope as you have hopelessness"--and here she grabs our shoulders--"But can you identify just what keeps you down like this?" Who knew this kind of music wouldn't just make us feel, but think?

For all of the tasteful melodicism, Alpinisms essentially orbits around two components: rhythm and voice. The beats resist showboating, but there's usually something interesting and workmanlike nailing the songs to the ground. It's rhythm, in fact, that singlehandedly keeps the 11-minute "Sempiternal/Amaranth" from deliquescing into liquid, a motorik chug (played by Blonde Redhead's Simone Pace) that acts dually as a compass and a coach for the other elements to keep moving. But it's the vocals that stand tall among the mélange and define the record. The Deheza twins are better singers than they really have any right to be: both of them incorporate the perfect amounts of airiness and vibrato, and they sound positively alluring without being outright exotic. They're the sorts of vocalists Dntel would have killed for on Life is Full of Possibilities or hoped to recruit for a full-length collaboration. "Half Asleep"--perhaps the album's trump card--sparkles like a prime Dntel production, where the Dehezas ride waves of shimmering cymbals and careening guitars that nearly swallow them whole.

Alpinisms could have used a few more of those moments, when the sounds overtake each other and induce a sense of blissful surrender. The Dehezas' voices are such strong presences that they call for an equally powerful musical force to push up against them. I think of Sweet Trip's Valerie Cooper--a vocalist remarkably akin to these two--who, at the tail end of "Design : 2 : 3", sings a beautiful skyward melody beneath 100 pounds of shoegaze weight. Still, you have to admire their conviction, and even when the songs don't ring true--there's just no way to salvage the awkward, Native American-tinged "Iamundernodisguise" no matter how hard you try--it's clear that the musicians believe in their art. It's this passion, and the conscientiousness that's required to keep refining and refining in order to get it just right, that could someday elevate this band to greatness.

(This was published in PopMatters on 11/26/08)
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9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Put away your formulas, they're no good here, November 20, 2008
By David M. Madden "nonnon/dj_webern" (salt lake, utah United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Alpinisms (MP3 Download)
Remember when you weren't so jaded and enjoyed music just because it perks your ears?

Alpinisms is an exciting, largely unique experience, appealing without the need of labels or even listener musical preference. Upfront, you have vocalists Alejandra and Claudia Deheza, flitting from folksy Marianne Faithful to neutral intoned Ladytron style croons to innocent My Bloody Valentineisms (those are still a stretch, but my first description, "Mellifluously opulent peasant style", doesn't really hold water), the duo intimately harmonized with interplay that only two sisters could share. Their virtuosic melodic and lyrical content is a refreshing pause in the world of unmusicality that often taints the indie-rock (yes, that's a label, sue me) world. Underneath, disparate musical textures from all walks of life churn into a somehow inviting mélange, one moment Indian meets recent Depeche Mode ("Wired for Light"), the next, an autotuned "Electric Avenue" slathered with baritone guitars and dumbek accents ("Chain") then into reverb-trails-to-heaven vocals over stripped-down Joy Division rhythms and melancholia ("White Elephant Coat").

Fortunate for the world, Alpinisms is not a continuation of current trends or something you casually put on and dissect. It might take months to figure it out why you enjoy it so much. But I have a good idea to fill that space: just listen.

And I challenge you, once under its spell, to stop humming "Iamundernodisguise".

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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Alpinisms makes me smile, November 16, 2008
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I haven't had this much fun listening to an album since the heydays of the Cocteau Twins. Beautiful songcraft, and singing from two gorgeous voices create a mesmerizing listening experience. Ben Curtis cooks up a backdrop of atmospheric soundscapes for the Deheza sisters harmonizing, calling, responding and sounding utterly joyous. Add in the synth-beats and we have dream pop bliss... a splendid debut!
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Most Recent Customer Reviews

4.0 out of 5 stars Slip out of those recession blues
Came upon this album by happenstance, always the best form of introduction. The music is melodic with an excited undercurrent, the voices of the two sisters reinforce each other... Read more
Published 7 months ago by Bongo eats Chopper

3.0 out of 5 stars Mole hills
I don't know what Alps Benjamin Curtis wanted to scale, but this CD hardly merits its buzz. While "dream pop" may be a worthy pursuit, School of Seven Bells doesn't take me... Read more
Published 7 months ago by greyhound1954

5.0 out of 5 stars favorite new album in a long time
in a world of mp3 players, i almost never listen to an album beginning to end any more, yet i've been listening to nothing but alpinisms in my car for two weeks. Read more
Published 8 months ago by Micah Levine

4.0 out of 5 stars On the strength...
of hearing 'Iamnotyourdisguise' on KEXP I excitedly rushed down to the store and bought it...
Resonation not felt in a long time
Sadly, no muisical Nirvana, just... Read more
Published 8 months ago by Mark C.

5.0 out of 5 stars Alpinisms ... Awesome!
Truly this is an awesome album. The pionering cadence and voice harmony of the Deheza twins is to behold. Read more
Published 9 months ago by Nano

4.0 out of 5 stars Auspicious Tribal-delic Debut
Here is snapshot of review I wrote for the Hot Sheet blog: http://www.thehotsheetrpr.com/school-of-seven-bells-355. Read more
Published 11 months ago by J. Skelley

5.0 out of 5 stars Ghostly Songs indeed
Imagine standing near a chasm in the alps and these voices from the Deheza sisters start fluttering over avalanche noise in the background (that being techno psyche-beats and... Read more
Published 11 months ago by Brian Tepper

5.0 out of 5 stars good recorded, great live
My Bloody Valentine, trance, chants, and harmonzing from the twins in the orginal film version of the Shining all blended together. Good stuff. They were great live as well.
Published 12 months ago by Sean McCloud

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