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Touche amore lament
Touche amore lament








The album’s most heartbreaking song, closer A Forecast, starts with wandering pianos as Bolm sings at a quiet sung register. A Broadcast moves at a tense, idle pace before unfolding into an explosive final minute, complete with giant emo backing vocals. Host also covers the topic of fan-artist interaction, and how diehards have used TA’s music to deal with their own issues, leading it to be one of the most interesting moments on the entire record.ĭespite the familiarity of these textures, this isn’t the same old same old for the LA group. The song’s opening fill is one of the most striking parts of the album, right before Bolm’s cynicism comes crashing in ( “It’s not what I would have chosen, it’s not what I want at all”). Stevens’ lead parts on I’ll Be Your Host cohere nicely with Elliot Babin’s driving drumwork to create a song as catchy as a Touché Amoré song can be. The Clayton Stevens and Nick Steinhardt guitarist duo here is front and center as always, whether that’s the country slide guitar of A Broadcast or the thrashing intensity of the brief Exit Row. Lament’s frenetic emotion is consistently backed by agile instrumentation. Bolm recognizes this on the opener: “Come heroine, with open arms you brought down the walls I defend,” he sings. There’s joy to be found in this world with the people you love, no matter how dark things can be. The warm Savoring and the love song Come Heroine add to this. Eventually, he reaches a deeply anthemic, pushing climax with the lines “so let’s embrace the twilight while burning out the limelight.” After a slow-burn start, the crescendo feels like a brief second of happiness.

touche amore lament touche amore lament

“I’m not so young anymore” notes Bolm on the sublime Limelight, before contrasting his screaming vocals with a sung part by Andy Hull of Manchester Orchestra. While personal progress is being made, he’s clearly still pushing through the same issues he was the last time we checked in with him. “If I find my bearings, can I settle down,” sings Bolm on Feign, an omen for the way things are about to go on this album. One thing is for sure, though: these guys are still writing and playing at the top of their game, making another album that’s just as brutal as Stage Four, if not a little more palatable for everyday listening. With Reminders -and more broadly, the group’s new album-it feels like there’s a hopefulness that interacts nicely with the themes and feelings that you’re accustomed to from Touché Amoré.

touche amore lament

If you’ve heard lead vocalist Jeremy Bolm’s howl, it’s likely you’d be destroyed by his honest and genuine songwriting-the kind of craft that brings songs like Flowers & You or the Julien Baker duet Skyscraper to be both universally and specifically depressing. Coming off of 2016’s Stage Four, it felt hard to characterize the five piece’s music as anything other than the most soul-crushing and enthralling post-hardcore that was out there. If you’ve watched the music video for Touché Amoré’s Reminders, an excellent song off their new album Lament, you’d be forgiven for being confused as to why such a dark band made such an adorable music video about things that bring joy.










Touche amore lament