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Figglesnout View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Topic: At the Drive-In Appreciation Thread
    Posted: July 02 2008 at 14:23
Not sure how many people here listen to ATDI, but they are one of my favorite bands for sure--with both In/Casino/Out and Relationship of Command being in my list of top albums I think, and Relationship of Command being my favorite post-hardcore album (I know it's a fairly mainstream choice--but it deserves it!).

Wondering if there are any other appreciators here?
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 02 2008 at 14:28
I really like Vaya because ze songs are all slightly unusual. Well, apart from Heliotrope, but zat one is easily skippable. o:) I know all the lyrics to Metronome Arthiritis and it's my pick of all their work.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 02 2008 at 14:29
Originally posted by laplace laplace wrote:

I really like Vaya because ze songs are all slightly unusual. Well, apart from Heliotrope, but zat one is easily skippable. o:) I know all the lyrics to Metronome Arthiritis and it's my pick of all their work.


Yes, Vaya is a great EP. As a matter of fact, the only ATDI output I'm really not into is the debut and El Grolio or whatever that other EP was called (I never listen to it, so I wouldn't know).

Vaya is certainly awesome though.

EDIT: And my pick of their work is Invalid Litter Dept. because I'm a sucker and it's awesome.

Edited by The Antique - July 02 2008 at 14:30
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 02 2008 at 14:33

I like em just fine, I thought Vaya was their best, Relationship of Command is a solid album though, haven't listened to it for a while...that album can be credited for bringing that 'Screamo' sound to the mainstream, I guess had to happen eventually, ATDI was as good a band as any to break though that commercial ceiling

 



Edited by mithrandir - July 02 2008 at 14:35
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 02 2008 at 14:39
Originally posted by mithrandir mithrandir wrote:

I like em just fine, I thought was their Vaya best, Relationship of Command is a solid album though, haven't listened to it for a while...that album can be credited for bringing that 'Screamo' sound to the mainstream, I guess had to happen eventually, ATDI was as good a band as any to break though that commercial ceiling


 



I might have to disagree about he scremo thing. But then it might just be me. I don't see ATDI as screamo at all really. I see them as pretty much a slightly experimental post-hardcore band...

Screamo to me is usually much more scream-ridden than ATDI, and heavier. At least to my perceptions. ATDI began as pretty much a Get-Up Kids knock off in my opinion, and developed into playing very fun, well-orchestrated post-hardcore with little to no metalic influences...

Also, screamo is an offspring of emo, which ATDI also isn't as far as I'm concerned...their only album I'd consider remotely emo (and I'm speaking 'emo' in the 90s sense) is their debut...

I just don't see screamo...but then again, I guess it's all perception. Screamo to me began from bands like I, Robot and the like, not ATDI; emo was carried by earlier Brand New and then bands like American Football and the Appleseed Cast.

I dunno. I could be VERY wrong here, and if I am, please educate me, as this topic has certainly always been a bit confused to me...
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 02 2008 at 14:40
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 02 2008 at 14:41
sink your teeth into it.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 02 2008 at 14:42
I like In/Casino/Out and that's all I have by them.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 02 2008 at 14:43
Originally posted by moreitsythanyou moreitsythanyou wrote:

I like In/Casino/Out and that's all I have by them.


Random facts: In/Casino/Out was essentially live recorded, which shows off this band's live energy. Look at some YouTube videos. It's ridiculous. I'd have loved to see them live.

You need to check out Relationship in Command and Vaya (EP).
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 02 2008 at 15:06
Originally posted by The Antique The Antique wrote:

Originally posted by mithrandir mithrandir wrote:

I like em just fine, I thought was their Vaya best, Relationship of Command is a solid album though, haven't listened to it for a while...that album can be credited for bringing that 'Screamo' sound to the mainstream, I guess had to happen eventually, ATDI was as good a band as any to break though that commercial ceiling


 



I might have to disagree about he scremo thing. But then it might just be me. I don't see ATDI as screamo at all really. I see them as pretty much a slightly experimental post-hardcore band...

Screamo to me is usually much more scream-ridden than ATDI, and heavier. At least to my perceptions. ATDI began as pretty much a Get-Up Kids knock off in my opinion, and developed into playing very fun, well-orchestrated post-hardcore with little to no metalic influences...

Also, screamo is an offspring of emo, which ATDI also isn't as far as I'm concerned...their only album I'd consider remotely emo (and I'm speaking 'emo' in the 90s sense) is their debut...

I just don't see screamo...but then again, I guess it's all perception. Screamo to me began from bands like I, Robot and the like, not ATDI; emo was carried by earlier Brand New and then bands like American Football and the Appleseed Cast.

I dunno. I could be VERY wrong here, and if I am, please educate me, as this topic has certainly always been a bit confused to me...
 
true, ATDI are very much a Post-Hardcore too, but much of Emo and Screamo takes a lot of influence from Post-Hardcore, I just tend to lump them all in as "Emotional Hardcore" aka Emo, (which to me has a different meaning than what Emo has now morphed into as todays Pop culture definition), the original Emo sound came from the DC Hardcore/Post-Hardcore scene, arguably the very first band being Rites of Spring, and you also get other bands like Fugazi, The Hated and Moss Icon who had a huge influence on the original wave of True Emo (Emotional Hardcore bands) like Policy of 3, Indian Summer, Current, Naitive Nod, etc...and then some of that branched off into a heavier, more dissonant and chaotic side thus the early Screamo bands...Frail, Herion, Portraits of the Past, Julia, etc. now somewhere around this time during the early 90s you also get a softer twinkly side of Emo with bands like Sunny Day Real Estate and Evergreen thus the Emo-Pop style is born which was obviously more accessible and carried on into the mainstream,
 
I feel sort of uber-Geeky knowing so much about Emo, but its surprising what a complicated and weighted term it's become, when you map out its history its amazing to see what was originally a more "Emotional" and less "Tuff" movement of Hardcore Punk (which began with the Revolution Summer bands in DC-approx 1985)...what's changed and how much has come out of it since then, somewhere around 1993-4ish it broke into about 5 or 6 distinctive styles, no sh*t,
 
try this site: http://www.fourfa.com/
 
its pretty informative reference on Emo, its history, different styles and key bands/albums, etc


Edited by mithrandir - July 02 2008 at 15:10
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 02 2008 at 15:21
^^thanks. That clears things up a bit for sure.

But then, I have a question. Post-Hardcore as a lable has always been a little vague to me. I know the stylistic sounds...but what precisely distinguishes it from, as you said, screamo and emo? Never really understood that...
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 02 2008 at 19:43
Originally posted by The Antique The Antique wrote:

^^thanks. That clears things up a bit for sure.

But then, I have a question. Post-Hardcore as a lable has always been a little vague to me. I know the stylistic sounds...but what precisely distinguishes it from, as you said, screamo and emo? Never really understood that...


I guess, Post-Hardcore can be seen in a few different ways, one being bands that started out Hardcore and moved in a different direction, Black Flag, Minutemen, Meat Puppets, Husker Du, are all sort of Post-Hardcore,

but what's more widely known as Post-Hardcore is the Fugazi/DC sound = angular twin guitar interplay, jazzy rhythm section, liberal use of arpeggiated guitar picking, sung to shouted/screamed vocals, all done with with a slight progressive and experimental spirit,

Fugazi, isn't necessarily an Emo band, but  they laid the groundwork for a lot the musical tools Emo bands went on to make their music with, Moss Icon are somewhat the same - they didn't start their band and say "hey, were an Emo band!" although they've been retroactively assigned that tag nowadays,

the Truer/Proper-Emo bands that followed like Indian Summer for example have a very similar sound structure to Fugazi but more somber in nature and the vocals have a touch more of a "whine" to them, its almost just a small step in one direction that distinguished these styles, so many bands you can consider both Emo and Post-Hardcore, while others like Fugazi, Shudder to Think, Drive Like Jehu, etc simply rest comfortably in the Post-Hardcore camp, even Slint is considered Post-Hardcore but of course they influenced another subgenre we all know now as Post-Rock! argh! more complications!

at the same time there's also a divide in the Screamo camp, the mainstream branch - stuff like Thursday and The Used, and the chaotic purer brand that stick more to their Underground Hardcore and even Grindcore roots...stuff like Orchid, Reversal of Man, Jeromes Dream, Usurp Synapse, Pg 99,  Circle Takes the Square etc...sometimes this style is also referred to as, "Emo Violence" or Chaotic Emo, ....
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 02 2008 at 20:15
^^Interesting. What's even more interesting is how few fans ATDI has here...
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 02 2008 at 20:50
I love them. I still rock Relationship of Command and Vaya now and then, but I can't get into In Casino Out anymore. Its writing is pretty primitive compared to the later releases, the perforamances aren't great, and I don't like the production at all. The only song I still really like off of it is the last track.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 03 2008 at 01:09
In/Casino/Out is my favorite of theirs. Raw, packed full of energy. RoC was great too, but it was a bit more mainstream in regards to creation, and advertisement which ended up helping the band getting noticed at the time (although MTV supposedly took the One Armed Scissor video off because it "sucked"). Anyways, I prefer their earlier stuff more so. They were good. Then they split into the great The Mars Volta/De Facto, and ATD-I part 2. Aka Sparta. It was like Wings vs. the Beatles.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 03 2008 at 01:14
One Armed Scissor video helped get me in to prog indirectly because I checked out the Mars Volta based on how much I liked it and the rest is history.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 03 2008 at 01:25
Originally posted by Moatilliatta Moatilliatta wrote:

I love them. I still rock Relationship of Command and Vaya now and then, but I can't get into In Casino Out anymore. Its writing is pretty primitive compared to the later releases, the perforamances aren't great, and I don't like the production at all. The only song I still really like off of it is the last track.


It's odd ot me that you say you can't get into In/Casino/Out, but you like Vaya. I think the production of Vaya is much worse than that of ICO, and I like every song but one on ICO, whereas with Vaya I like 4...of the 7, and find the rest to be mediocre. It's odd to me why everyone here seems to like Vaya so much...I think it's rather boring and not as energetic as with In/Casino/Out, which I like nearly as much as Relationship of Command. Mayhaps you should give it another listen?

Keeping in mind that it was essentially a live (in studio of course) recording, I think the prosuction is very good and captures the energy the band created very well.

Acrobatic Tenement is the album that sucked
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 03 2008 at 02:34
^I actually just listened to it a couple of days ago when I was looking for some albums to trade. It gets less enjoyable each time. Vaya doesn't have great production, but i think first and foremost the songs are way better, and I also feel more of an atmosphere about Vaya. In Casino Out isn't bad, I just don't think the band hit their stride yet and it's just not something I'm into anymore.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 03 2008 at 02:43
Woa, can't believe I didn't think of this thread before.
Just behind the Refused album "The Shape of Punk To Come", Relationship of Command is probably my second favorite post hardcore album.
I honestly used to have this ill conceived notion that punk just sounded like the Sex Pistols and the Ramones, and hearing those two aforementioned albums really opened my mind up to the fact punk isn't just one genre by itself, but has many sub genres and of course I loved the music contained on those two albums.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: July 03 2008 at 11:00
I listen to Relationship of Command more often than I listen to TMV.
 
I had Vaya but didn't like the poor production.
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