Thee Silver Mt. Zion About to Kollaps
12/11/2009

Latest album for Constellation the Canadian band's first with the new lineup.
By Blurt Staff
Thee Silver Mt. Zion Memorial Orchestra (SMZ) returns with its sixth full-length recording and first since the band's line-up change in summer 2008. Having shed three members and recruited a new drummer, the group officially dropped the "Tra-La-La Band' from its name, played a debut performance as a newly minted quintet at All Tomorrow's Parties in upstate NY, and embarked on an extensive European tour through the Fall of 2008. The new album is titled Kollaps Tradixionales and is due Feb. 16 from Constellation, which advises that "the band has lost none of its raw and frazzled anthemic power and continues to forge bold new ground in its search for a unique hybrid of punk, blues, psych, folk and modern orchestral idioms."
Anchored by the fried electric guitar and plangent voice of band leader Efrim Menuck (who previously
co-founded Godspeed You! Black Emperor)
SMZ continues to slide towards
an expansive, loose and blues-inflected balladry - not so much the inexorably
riffing blues shuffle of the title track from its previous effort, 13 Blues
For Thirteen Moons, but a more languid waltz-time marking the smouldering
dynamic arcs of the new album's opening track "There Is A Light" and gorgeous closer "'Piphany Rambler."
Whatever the blues influence, the slow burn of SMZ bears little relation to typical notions of musical seduction,
relaxation, or hip-swinging satisfaction. What crackles here is much more
precarious and anxious, driven by some of this decade's more devastating
lyrical conjurings of the universal outsider and the antinomies born of 21st
century western psychic oppression. As the lyrics to "There Is A
Light" attest, these are no simple paeans to the human spirit, but
songs of complex, desperate and thorny hope. The words to this song (and so
many others too often misunderstood in the SMZ canon) should dispel the oft-repeated charge that Menuck is
some sort of miserablist or glib pessimist.
And of course there is plenty going on here that ain't no blues at all,
particularly the two middle sides of this double album. "Metal
Bird" (as it has been known to fans from set lists over the past
couple of years) has been a crowd favorite in concert in recent years,
careening through a throbbing 7/4 template of intertwined ascending and
descending lines, coalescing into unison melodies and pumping breakdowns. The
sonic references are abundant - from Afrobeat to bouzouki music to hard bop to
punk rock. The three phases of the album's title track on Side Three are indeed
'traditionals' of a sort, playing on tropes of American and Anglo-Saxon folk,
marching song, sea shanty and hymnal. Together they make for perhaps the most
overtly enchanting ("Kollapz"), tender ("Collapse") and terrifyingly rapturous ("Kollaps") music on the record.
Kollaps Tradixionales is available on standard CD (in a custom
gatefold paperboard jacket) and limited-edition deluxe CD (which is packaged
together with a 6"x9" 16-page perfect-bound art book and poster). The
album also comes in a deluxe first pressing on double 10" vinyl, with the
art book, a CD copy, and two different posters inside. The album is also
available digitally.

Tracklisting:
1. There Is A Light
2. I Built Myself A Metal Bird
3. I Fed My Metal Bird The Wings Of Other Metal Birds
4. Kollapz Tradixional (Thee Olde Dirty Flag)
5. Collapse Traditional (For Darling)6. Kollpas Tradicional (Bray 3 Dynamos)
7. 'Piphany Rambler
The band has posted a new song, entitled "Kollaps Tradicional (Bury 3 Dynamos)," which appears on their newly launched website, located here: http://www.tra-la-la-band.com/











