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Tag: Circle Takes the Square


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REVIEW: Circle Takes the Square’s Decompositions: Volume Number One

Posted on January 18, 2013October 8, 2013 by Vince Jarocki

Circle Takes The Square‘s Decompositions, Volume Number One is a record that dissolves boundaries, a journey through time arriving at the crossroads of an epoch.  Blurring the lines between human and animal, earthly and supernatural, linear and cyclical, and creative and destructive, Decompositions sounds like a fevered ayahuasca dream.

Listening to Decompositions‘ stream of apocryphal consciousness is both exhilarating and confounding, much like a classic thriller.  Ambitious and epic, it’s clear why the project took over two years in production to come to fruition.  Sonically lush, musically progressive, and densely lyrical, Decompositions is a Pandora’s box that will be studied for years to come.

A tribal chant sets the tone for the album in the opener “Enter by the Narrow Gates,” a song that bridges the gap between the shamanic traditions of Native Americans and the cacophony of 21st century post-hardcore.  With the help of modern instrumentation, CTTS create a hypnotic, often mind-bending vibe as somber aboriginal-style chanting gives way to a soundscape of slow, crashing drums, distorted electric guitars, and finally, the carnal screams of a shattered reality, welcoming the end of one Earth cycle and the beginning of another. It’s a signature song, and one of their best to date.

The opener flows seamlessly, as does much of the album, into “Spirit Narrative,” a short burst of progressive hardcore with lyrical themes of shapeshifting and animal transformation.  Had they existed in 17th century colonial America, it’s quite possible CTTS would have been burned at the stake for heresy(!)  Background screams from guitarist David Rabitor add to the brutality of the song.

“Way of Ever Branching Paths” is one of the album’s standouts, with bizarre time changes and a much looser feel in parts than CTTS have experimented with in the past.  The song conveys an “order out of chaos” feel, while the lyrics explore esoteric and spiritual revelations drawn from Earth’s archaic history.  Melodic singing from bassist Kathleen Stubelek and drummer Caleb Collins provides a welcome, if chilling break from the din of screams.  It’s also possible to view the song as a metaphor for the diverging lives of the bands’ members, which are geographically spread across North America.

From this point on, the album builds in momentum and intensity, hurtling towards some great unseen cataclysm.  “The Ancestral Other Side” references the ancient symbol Ouroboros in the line, “Through fevered visions, silence devouring its own tail, Unbroken circle, grant us the crisis needed to heal.”  It’s an existential take on music as a therapeutic and constantly evolving force set against the blank canvas of silence.  It’s also a reference to the cyclical, primordial Earth themes that are present throughout.

“Prefaced By the Signal Fires” should remind longtime fans of “A Crater to Cough In,” one of the band’s more epic and heavier cuts from their 2004 release As the Roots Undo.  The track kicks off the second half of the album, flowing into the more contemplative but still heavy-as-hell “A Closing Chapter (Scarlet Rising).”  Here, ominous melodies blend with bone-crushing rhythms and vague prophecies of Armageddon and the end of time as we perceive it.

“Singing Vengance into Being” and “Arrowhead as Epilouge” revisit themes of animism, higher consciousness, cyclical time, and death as transition.  The tension builds with snarling guitars, growling bass and aggressive drums, and the Circle’s token call-and-response vocal stylings of bassist Kathleen and guitarist/vocalist Drew Speziale, before climaxing with “North Star, Inverted.”  The album’s dreamlike, acoustic-flavored finale perfectly bookends with the opener, bringing a long-awaited vision to its epic conclusion.  It’s Neurosis-meets-Mazzy-Star, a goose bump-delivering acceptance of the end, rife with elaborate instrumentation and haunting vocals. The feeling of stark finality is what makes it so special, and arguably the best song of their career.

It’s a stunning accomplishment that often defies description, a true piece of art and snapshot of a band (and civilization) at a fractal boundary.  Through dark times, Circle Takes the Square carry the light of knowledge and self-discovery.

9/10

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Circle Takes the Square pre-orders available now

Posted on January 15, 2013October 8, 2013 by Vinyl Mag

It’s finally happened.  The moment we have all been waiting for.  Our dear, talented friends from Circle Takes the Square have released Decompositions: Volume Number One digitally, and now it’s time to get your pre-orders in for physical copies…and so much more.

For those of you who don’t remember Vinyl Mag’s first interview ever, Decompositions: Volume Number One was recorded/mixed/mastered by Anthony Stubelek at Rockstudio in Brunswick, Ga. and released through the band’s own label, Gatepost Recordings.

Now back to the pre-orders.  Dudes.  We need to talk.

Let’s start with the “Bug-Out Bag” Survival Kit.  I can honestly and sincerely say that I have never seen a cooler package put together by a band.  It’s golden.  For $115, you get a custom CTTS:

  • Survival kit with “high-quality Military/UN approved items”
  • Flashlight engraved with the lyrics “Illuminate the Way”
  • Water bottle
  • T-shirt (illustration by CTTS’s own Drew Speziale) *remember to enter your size manually
  • Decompositions: Volume Number One vinyl and CD
  • Koozie
  • Two buttons
  • Poster
  • Tote bag

Seriously?  This thing is unbelievable.  If the world does end (like if those silly Mayans got their dates mixed up), you’ll be totally set, and you’ll have a damn killer album to carry you through the apocalypse.

“We were considering the prospects of the bundles,” said Kathleen Stubelek of CTTS.  “The idea came from wanting to put together something that pertained to the album, yet was also full of items that people could actually use…not just merch for merch’s sake.  So it’s basically a companion to the apocalypse.  You have a survival kit, the nicest one we could find.  You have a little flashlight, a water bottle, and you have the perfect soundtrack for watching your surroundings crumble around you!  It’s completely self indulgent, but it was a lot of fun to put together.”

So there you go.  Completely brilliant.

Other pre-order packages are available if you want to take your chances.

    • T-shirt “The Watchers”
    • CD Decompositions: Volume Number One
    • “Mega Bundle” CD/LP/Shirt/Extras
    • LP + Shirt Bundle Decompositions: Volume Number One

So get all up on it, and enjoy!

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In the Studio with Circle Takes the Square

Posted on September 24, 2011October 7, 2013 by Emily McBride

I got the chance to sit down in the studio with Kathleen Stubelek and Drew Speziale from Circle Takes the Square to talk about their new album, the recording process, and how they got where they are.

For those of you who don’t know, CTTS is an experimental screamo band from Savannah, Georgia. They are currently recording their new album, Decompositions, Volume 1, Chapter 1: Rites of Initiation.

Just wanna be sure to really thank Drew and Kathy for giving me such a great interview to launch VINYL with and Anthony Stubelek for inviting me into the studio and helping set up the interview. Couldn’t have asked for a better interview, and couldn’t have done it without you guys!

Interview is below:

 

Check out this bonus interview with producer and engineer (not to mention Kathleen’s husband), Anthony Stubelek, with some “deeply” inspiring comments from Drew.

 

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