8.9.08

Daylight Dies - Lost to the Living

by Cosmo Lee

I put on Lost to the Living (Candlelight, 2008) as Hurricane Hanna hit New York. As rain curtained my windows, my room darkened. It wasn't just the sky. My thoughts went south to North Carolina, home of Daylight Dies, and where Hanna had just touched down. Few bands change the color of a room so effectively. Outside of metal: Joy Division and The Cure (for me, Disintegration (incidentally, this record was mixed at Fascination Street Studios)). In metal, Daylight Dies' colleagues: Katatonia, Sentenced, Swallow the Sun, Insomnium. These are soundtracks for rainy days - blankets, hot tea, and metal.

A Subtle Violence
Cathedral

Daylight Dies began as a competent melodic death metal band; their 1999 demo The Long Forgotten is a startling contrast to their current sound. They slowed down and developed a melancholy atmosphere that emerged fully-formed on 2002's No Reply. 2006's Dismantling Devotion added hooks and weight; Lost to the Living continues on this path. Its chord progressions seemingly never resolve. Instead, they continually modulate and morph into ever-darker shades. Plaintive melodies keen above, with gruff vocals and occasional singing. The growl to melody ratio reminds me of Amon Amarth, though Daylight Dies' music is much lusher. Drummer Jesse Haff ran the superb, now-defunct MP3 blog, darkdose.com, and this record reflects that site: somber and smart. Metal-wise, it easily stands up to what Scandinavia offers these days.

Buy:
The End
Candlelight
Daylight Dies

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7 Comments:

Blogger Etan said...

Lovelovelove this album. Even the instrumental track owns. I saw 'em open for Candlemass earlier this year, and the somberness carried through even as they rocked the hell outta these songs. Dudes are totally pro.

8:22 AM  
Blogger Jess Blumensheid said...

How was Candlemass. did they do the doom stomp?

11:56 AM  
Anonymous Invisible Oranges said...

Yeah, how was that show, Etan? I am really kicking myself for missing that tour.

12:38 PM  
Blogger Etan said...

Candlemass sounded fantastic instrumentally, especially the lead guitarist. Rob Lowe I coulda done without. His voice was in good form but he looks and acts like that perverted uncle that still lives in your grandma's house and criticizes everything out of bitterness. No command over the audience at all, every one of his jokes fell flat, and dude seriously needs to ditch the 5th Ave. hotel doorman getup. To be fair, I probably would have been a little disappointed if anyone other than Messiah Mercolin were singing. At least Messiah LOOKS cool.

10:53 PM  
Blogger David Snusgrop said...

Oh nigga please...

Johan Längquist owns Messiah any day of the week.

I thought everyone knew that.

7:17 AM  
Anonymous paris said...

Great tunes, thanks! "A Subtle Violence" is a keeper, for sure!

12:33 PM  
Blogger alexey said...

After some 20 +- listens I can safely say this is one of my top favorite albums this year. So fucking elegant. Thank you very much for bringing it up!

2:55 AM  

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