
HOLY SONS - Raw and Disfigured DLP
The music of Emil Amos is at once intimate and expansive. Under the name Holy Sons, as well as with bands Om, Grails, and Lilacs and Champagne, Amos harnesses boundless sonic textures to embellish delicately crafted songs. His music balances cues from classic and indie rock traditions with a tenderness and sense of foreboding through unparalleled artistry. Holy Sonsâ first double album Raw and Disfigured showcases Amosâ mastery of songcraft through a seemingly impossible combination of subtle yet potent gestures, bold arrangements and resolute vulnerability. Raw and Disfigured stands as Amosâ most ambitious and comprehensive album yet, a panoramic gallery of songs as beautiful as they are crushing.Â
Raw and Disfigured draws thematically from the archetypal tale of Quasimodo and classic ghost story imagery to illustrate the "hero's journey" in the time of a coming apocalypse. Album opener âThe Loser That Always Winsâ acts as the albumâs thematic thesis and traces the tale of an underdog triumphing against all odds. From the opening swells, Amos creates a sense of mystery and tension. Melodic sections pierce through the thick fogs of unease with gliding choral harmonies and guitar lines. The looming threat of apocalypse hangs in the air of âCast Bound Kingâ and âPermanent Thingsâ which gives way to sun dappled catharsis. Songs like âLady of the Hourâ and âTransformationâ serve as vistas amidst the gloom with sweeping pastoral layers and melodies that grasp towards hope rather than resignation. Amos pays homage to one of the greatest champions of the underdog in outsider pop music with an anthemic cover of Daniel Johnstonâs âHeld the Hand.â Closing piece âBloody Stringsâ quietly draws the curtains on the album, borrowing melodic phrases from âPermanent Thingsâ and reconfiguring them into a funeral march towards acceptance of our inevitable decay.
The recording of Raw and Disfigured took place largely at Sonic Youthâs studio Echo Canyon West. Amos, who plays the bulk of the instruments and sings the majority of the vocals throughout the album, is joined on a few pieces by drummer Steve Shelley (Sonic Youth), as well as album and WFMU in-house engineer Ernie Indradat. The swirling atmospheres of âLost in the Fireâ and âSlow To Runâ (featuring Shelley) invoke the spaced-out textures of Spacemen 3 to color Amosâ moving pop structures. âCoiste Bodharâ buttresses the albumâs cinematic undercurrent across nine minutes of instrumental grandeur as affecting as the touchingly raw electric piano and voice duet of the albumâs final minutes.
The music of Emil Amos is at once intimate and expansive. Under the name Holy Sons, as well as with bands Om, Grails, and Lilacs and Champagne, Amos harnesses boundless sonic textures to embellish delicately crafted songs. His music balances cues from classic and indie rock traditions with a tenderness and sense of foreboding through unparalleled artistry. Holy Sonsâ first double album Raw and Disfigured showcases Amosâ mastery of songcraft through a seemingly impossible combination of subtle yet potent gestures, bold arrangements and resolute vulnerability. Raw and Disfigured stands as Amosâ most ambitious and comprehensive album yet, a panoramic gallery of songs as beautiful as they are crushing.Â
Raw and Disfigured draws thematically from the archetypal tale of Quasimodo and classic ghost story imagery to illustrate the "hero's journey" in the time of a coming apocalypse. Album opener âThe Loser That Always Winsâ acts as the albumâs thematic thesis and traces the tale of an underdog triumphing against all odds. From the opening swells, Amos creates a sense of mystery and tension. Melodic sections pierce through the thick fogs of unease with gliding choral harmonies and guitar lines. The looming threat of apocalypse hangs in the air of âCast Bound Kingâ and âPermanent Thingsâ which gives way to sun dappled catharsis. Songs like âLady of the Hourâ and âTransformationâ serve as vistas amidst the gloom with sweeping pastoral layers and melodies that grasp towards hope rather than resignation. Amos pays homage to one of the greatest champions of the underdog in outsider pop music with an anthemic cover of Daniel Johnstonâs âHeld the Hand.â Closing piece âBloody Stringsâ quietly draws the curtains on the album, borrowing melodic phrases from âPermanent Thingsâ and reconfiguring them into a funeral march towards acceptance of our inevitable decay.
The recording of Raw and Disfigured took place largely at Sonic Youthâs studio Echo Canyon West. Amos, who plays the bulk of the instruments and sings the majority of the vocals throughout the album, is joined on a few pieces by drummer Steve Shelley (Sonic Youth), as well as album and WFMU in-house engineer Ernie Indradat. The swirling atmospheres of âLost in the Fireâ and âSlow To Runâ (featuring Shelley) invoke the spaced-out textures of Spacemen 3 to color Amosâ moving pop structures. âCoiste Bodharâ buttresses the albumâs cinematic undercurrent across nine minutes of instrumental grandeur as affecting as the touchingly raw electric piano and voice duet of the albumâs final minutes.
Original: $32.41
-70%$32.41
$9.72Description
The music of Emil Amos is at once intimate and expansive. Under the name Holy Sons, as well as with bands Om, Grails, and Lilacs and Champagne, Amos harnesses boundless sonic textures to embellish delicately crafted songs. His music balances cues from classic and indie rock traditions with a tenderness and sense of foreboding through unparalleled artistry. Holy Sonsâ first double album Raw and Disfigured showcases Amosâ mastery of songcraft through a seemingly impossible combination of subtle yet potent gestures, bold arrangements and resolute vulnerability. Raw and Disfigured stands as Amosâ most ambitious and comprehensive album yet, a panoramic gallery of songs as beautiful as they are crushing.Â
Raw and Disfigured draws thematically from the archetypal tale of Quasimodo and classic ghost story imagery to illustrate the "hero's journey" in the time of a coming apocalypse. Album opener âThe Loser That Always Winsâ acts as the albumâs thematic thesis and traces the tale of an underdog triumphing against all odds. From the opening swells, Amos creates a sense of mystery and tension. Melodic sections pierce through the thick fogs of unease with gliding choral harmonies and guitar lines. The looming threat of apocalypse hangs in the air of âCast Bound Kingâ and âPermanent Thingsâ which gives way to sun dappled catharsis. Songs like âLady of the Hourâ and âTransformationâ serve as vistas amidst the gloom with sweeping pastoral layers and melodies that grasp towards hope rather than resignation. Amos pays homage to one of the greatest champions of the underdog in outsider pop music with an anthemic cover of Daniel Johnstonâs âHeld the Hand.â Closing piece âBloody Stringsâ quietly draws the curtains on the album, borrowing melodic phrases from âPermanent Thingsâ and reconfiguring them into a funeral march towards acceptance of our inevitable decay.
The recording of Raw and Disfigured took place largely at Sonic Youthâs studio Echo Canyon West. Amos, who plays the bulk of the instruments and sings the majority of the vocals throughout the album, is joined on a few pieces by drummer Steve Shelley (Sonic Youth), as well as album and WFMU in-house engineer Ernie Indradat. The swirling atmospheres of âLost in the Fireâ and âSlow To Runâ (featuring Shelley) invoke the spaced-out textures of Spacemen 3 to color Amosâ moving pop structures. âCoiste Bodharâ buttresses the albumâs cinematic undercurrent across nine minutes of instrumental grandeur as affecting as the touchingly raw electric piano and voice duet of the albumâs final minutes.











