A Silver Mt. Zion - 13 Blues for Thirteen Moons

A Silver Mt. Zion’s most recent release, 13 Blues for Thirteen Moons, has one of the most unconventional tracklistings I’ve seen in a while. The first twelve tracks are untitled and serve as a brief introduction to track thirteen and the four substantial tracks on the record.
13 Blues is pretty much par for the course as far as post-rock is concerned, although its use of vocals is a bit adventurous. Even though the song “1,000,000 Died to Make This Sound” contains a very well-layered vocal arrangement, for the most part, the vocals suffer from disuse and misuse. A Silver Mt. Zion seems to treat the human voice as just another instrument. As such, instead of carrying a melodic tune, the voice is used to produce the same repetition, dissonance, and occasional blandness as the rest of the instruments in the band. This kind of thing can work with a guitar or a violin, but with a voice, it becomes annoying very quickly. The title track is good evidence of this, as the flat, repetitive vocals tarnish an otherwise polished song.
The lyrics, penned by guitarist Efrim Menuck of Godspeed You! Black Emperor fame, are abstract and impenetrable. Menuck manages to get across his anger and frustration and radicalism without ever actually making any sense, a feat that could is both admirable and idiotic.
Other than the vocals and lyrics, the 13 Blues seems to have the advantages and drawbacks typical of most post-rock. The songs suffer from lengthy compositions that can lose the listener’s interest in places and the occasional dissonances are at times too ugly to be effective. However, the music has obviously been arranged with care, and the haunting, beautiful introductions invariably build powerfully to dramatic climaxes that can make the boredom and cringing of the last ten minutes totally worth it.
Although two of the songs are relatively weak, the tracks “1,000,000 Died to Make This Sound” and “Blindblindblind” make the album worthy of a few listens. But in the end, 13 Blues for Thirteen Moons is far from a masterpiece and far from an abomination.
Buy it if: you like post-rock, you rebel against everything popular, or you don’t mind waiting ten minutes for a song to finally get around to blowing you away.
Score: 5/10
Available at Amazon.com