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Live at Dead Air split w/ Tyler Daniel Bean

by Au Revoir

/
1.
Someone in a dream once told me, they didn't think I was a quitter. But everyday, waking up gets harder and harder.
2.
Willow I. Our house the garden my body burn it I don’t want it anymore. I want your hair in the sheets in my clothes in my food. I want to lie on the floor on the grass on my back, wherever you’ll find me— forever, if need be. I want to be where you are talk out loud hear when you say, You saw the squirrel again, today. I want you to stare in my eyes yawn and pant. I want to be where you are. Willow II. This pressure, this pain, is my body coming up against a wall and not seeing it as a wall, but instead as a field in which I can grow, in which I can throw Willow her ball that she’ll never run towards. Still, I’ll throw it again and I’ll pet her and I’ll tell her without you I can’t make sense of my life, and she will tell me it’s alright, alright, and it will be alright. There is a life outside my body calling for me. Today I want to take it seriously.

about

In the world of music, is there anything more interesting than a split between great friends who exist in different genre realms? If you consider similar splits between artists like Piebald & Cave In or The One AM Radio & Jerome's Dream, you'll find that while a split between Tyler Daniel Bean and Au Revoir may seem surprising on paper, something captivating develops when relating their songs—you realize that we're all, in our own way, working through the same issues. Over a year in the making, a year marred with major injuries and loss, this split was recorded live over two days in 2015 (one in January, the other in September) by Will Killingsworth (Orchid, Ampere, Longings) in Western Mass’s secluded Dead Air Studios. Tyler Daniel Bean's two-part track, "Willow," his first offering since the 2013 EP Everything You Do Scares Me, boasts a seven-piece band featuring members of The New & Very Welcome, Cbrasnke, Noodle, and Nyiko. "Willow," a song about coping with death, delves into our response to loss, our escapist tendencies, and our desire to not exist alone. Ending ambiguously and repetitiously, "Willow” proclaims that while it may not always seem the case, everything will always be alright. Au Revoir's "Repose," their follow up to 2013's Black Hills, showcases the band's new 5-piece line up. It also stands as the first song they've recorded with vocals since 2012's In The Key Of Night—a dynamic they continue to explore on their new LP Veles (due out in March). Weaving melody with discord in a way that can only be compared to bands on Constellation Records, Au Revoir explores the weight of daily life, suggesting that it's getting harder and harder to wake from their dreams. Cap all of this off with artwork by William Schaff (Godspeed You! Black Emperor, Songs:Ohia, Brown Bird) and you have a compelling, beautiful release by two bands that consider writing music an integral part of continuance.

credits
released March 17, 2016 through:
Tor Johnson Records
Orb Weaver Press

Recorded live by Will Killingsworth at Dead Air Studio in Western, MA.
Mastered by Dan Coutant at Sun Room Audio in Cornwall, NY.
Art by Will Schaff.
Layout design by Justin Gonyea.

credits

released March 15, 2016

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all rights reserved

tags

about

Au Revoir New Jersey

Dark and heavy emotional music.

Second American press of Veles up now.

booking:
aurevoir.sounds@gmail.com

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