Twilight Sad - Here It Snowed. Afterwards It Did
by John Clarkson
published: 9 / 6 / 2008

Label:
Fat Cat Records
Format: CD
intro
Superb mini album from Scottish post rock and shoegazing act the Twilight Sad,which finds them taking songs from their debut album 'Fourteen Autumns and Fifteen Winters' of last year and gutsily reinventing their own recent past
The Twilight Sad are currently working on songs for their second album, which will not be released until early next year. In the meantime, after a successful twelve months in which they both released their critically acclaimed debut album, ‘Fourteen Autumns and Fifteen Winters’, and also established themselves as visceral live outfit, they have as an interim step put together ‘Here, It Never Snowed. Afterwards It Did’, a six track collection consisting of re-workings of songs from that first album. ‘Here It Snowed. Afterwards It Did’ is, however, far from being another case of remix hell. While Andy MacFarlane’s mercurial and discordant guitar work dominated ‘Fourteen Autumns and Fifteen Winters’, the songs on it were originally written around just acoustic guitar and James Graham’s vocals. ‘Here It Snowed. Afterwards It Did’ came about after the Scottish group were invited to play a church and then other quieter settings , and strips the songs back to basics, plugging a fan organ through effects, and only then adding to it the guitars, and also drones and violins. It offers a radical and completely new reinterpretation of the tracks involved, taking the Scottish’act's previous stormy post-rock and shoegazing sound and giving it a folk tinge. ‘Cold Days from the Birdhouse’, which opens both ‘Fourteen Autumns and Fifteen Winters’ and also this new mini-album, develops an eerie, muted industrialism. Mark Devine’s top-heavy drums and MacFarlane’s whirring guitar sound effects, the main points of former single, ‘And She Would Darken the Memory’, are reduced to a mere whisper, and the whole track is overhauled with a slowly beaconing ethereality and beauty which were only part visible in the past. Album track, ‘Mapped By What Surrounded Them’, meanwhile maintains the raging drones of its original, but they are less klaxoning than before, and MacFarlane’s tingling accordion, a shadowy presence on the previous recording, becomes more prominent. The only thing that doesn’t change is James Graham’s enigmatic lyrics, which hinting at both violence and tragedy, remain deliberately obtuse. If there is a false point as a result, it is with the final song, ‘Some Things Last a Long Time’, a previously unreleased track and a softly seesawing cover of Daniel Johnston song, in which Johnston’s all too clear lyrics about love lost jars with what has already gone before. At just over half an hour in length, this is, however, a very fine mini album, one which more than fills the gap with the Twilight Sad until the release of their second proper album next year, and which finds this startlingly original group, having already established a successful formula with their first record, gutsily reinventing their own recent past.
Track Listing:-
1 And She Would Darken The Memory2 Cold Days From The Birdhouse
3 Here, It Never Snowed. Afterwards It Did
4 Mapped By What Surrounded Them
5 Walking For Two Hours
6 Some Things Last A Long Time
Label Links:-
http://www.fat-cat.co.uk/https://www.facebook.com/FatCatRecords
http://fatcat-records.tumblr.com/
https://www.youtube.com/fatcatrecords
https://twitter.com/FatCatRecords
interviews |
Interview (2012) |
![]() |
John Clarkson speaks to James Graham from brooding Scottish rock band the Twlight Sad about his band's post-punk influenced third album, No One Can Ever Know’ |
Interview (2008) |
live reviews |
Richmond Park, Glasgow, 30/8/2014 |
![]() |
At the chaotic Last Big Weekend Festival in Glasgow, Tony Gaughan watches brooding Scottish post-rockers the Twilight Sad play a short but intense and brilliant gig |
Ruby Lounge, Manchester, 10/2/2012 |
Ruby Lounge, Manchester, 23/10/2009 |
Bongo Club, Edinburgh, 15/6/2008 |
Cabaret Voltaire, Edinburgh, 29/11/2007 |
photography |
Photoscapes (2014) |
![]() |
Darren Aston takes photographs of Scottish post-punk act the Twilight Sad at the East Village Arts Club in Liverpool |
reviews |
Forget the Night Ahead (2009) |
![]() |
Dark and enigmatic, but evocative second album from much acclaimed Scottish-based post rockers, the Twilight Sad |
And She Would Darken the Memory (2007) |
Fourteen Autumns and Fifteen Winters (2007) |
most viewed articles
current edition
Pennyblackmusic - Writers and Photographers' Albums of the Year 2024Peter Perrett - In Dreams Begin Responsibilities Interview Part One
Man From Delmonte - Interview
Clive Langer - Interview
Pennyblackmusic - Book of the Year Award 2024
Johnnie Johnstone - Interview
Marianne Faithfull - Reflections
Laura Nyro - Profile
Johny Brown - Corpse Flower
Vinyl Stories - Vinyl 2024
most viewed reviews
current edition
Dorie Jackson - Stupid Says RunRingo Starr - Look Up
Beabadoobee - This is How The World Moves
Pixie Lott - Encino
Dusty Springfield - The BBC Sessions
Unthanks - In Winter
Joan Armatrading - How Did This Happen and What Does It Mean?
Rosie Lowe - Lover, Other
Oïmiakon - Comptoir Des Vanites
Emily Burns - Die Happy
Pennyblackmusic Regular Contributors
Adrian Janes
Amanda J. Window
Andrew Twambley
Anthony Dhanendran
Benjamin Howarth
Cila Warncke
Daniel Cressey
Darren Aston
Dastardly
Dave Goodwin
Denzil Watson
Dominic B. Simpson
Eoghan Lyng
Fiona Hutchings
Harry Sherriff
Helen Tipping
Jamie Rowland
John Clarkson
Julie Cruickshank
Kimberly Bright
Lisa Torem
Maarten Schiethart