Lifeline Jesu

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CD - EP

  • Release Date: 10/23/2007
  • Sales Rank: 66,408
  • Label: HYDRAHEAD RECORDS
  • UPC: 798546233128
 
  • Overview
  • Tracks
  • Editorial Reviews
  • Customer Reviews
  • Details & Credits
Track List
Click on LISTEN or link to hear an audio clip.
To listen to samples you'll need a Windows Media Player

Lifeline

1LISTENLifeline 5:19
2LISTENYou Wear Their Masks 6:16
3LISTENStorm Comin' On 5:54
4LISTENEnd of the Road 5:30

About this Artist

Editorial Reviews

If observing Justin Broadrick's recorded history is any indication of being to predict his musical future, this fifth release -- four EPs and a full-length -- by his Jesu project may be rounding the bend toward something else; then again, he's never been entirely predictable. One of the great hilarities of this four-song, 23-minute slab is its great irony. Broadrick takes credit for playing all the instruments, doing all the programming, and singing all the vocals here. But then he lists in his credits that on the set's best cut, "Storm Comin' Out," that Ted Parsons played drums, Jarboe sang, and the bowed bass was played by Diarmuid Dalton. What's more, this cut is easily the one cut in the Jesu discography that's different from all the rest. Jarboe has never been so seductive, sweet, or dangerous as she is here. Broadrick's lilting melodies, comprised of two of three chords, seem to bring something out of her that drips with a wider, softer emotional palette than she's shown for quite some time. But appearances can be deceiving. The truth is it's always been there, but Jarboe has been so focused on letting certain emotions and aesthetic concerns out on her own records that here her gorgeous lyrics and the relative restraint of her astonishing vocal range actually lend themselves to the tremendous emotional depth on this track. Rather than being lulled into a baseline melancholy by the Jesu-proper cuts, there is real drama here: the romance of reverie, warning about the self-deception involved, and the most maternal loving concern and compassion offered by the singer. Broadrick's guitars get positively crunchy, Parsons' drums are resoundingly clear, and the bowed bass by Dalton is the true extension of the Jesu trademark texture -- besides that melody, of course. That said, there isn't a thing lacking in any of these cuts. The title cut and "You Wear Their Masks" are both drenched in that washed-out, speaker-phrasing trademark that has graced all of the Jesu's releases thus far. Broadrick's concentration and self-limiting exercise in melodic restraint offers these beautifully full-sounding contradictions in rock real power. But even here, there are shades of difference: on the opener, Broadrick's vocals are almost completely discernible, and on the latter, there are these brief transitions laced in with real bludgeoning power chords amid all the gauze. On the set's final cut, "End of the Road," an organ introduces a down-tuned open-key guitar chord laying its slow plodding metal dirge theme. Once again, though, the thin drums and sweet-from-the-megaphone vocals interspersed with that keyboard make it almost delicate (in almost an Eyeless in Gaza manner) despite the sheer heaviness of the thing. Here again, the vocals are nearly clear and would be completely distinct from the mix were it not for that megaphone effect. So there's something afoot and Lifeline is a welcome extension of the Jesu aesthetic. Thom Jurek, All Music Guide

Customer Reviews

  • Listener Rating:
  • Ratings: 1Reviews: 1

JB does it again...by Anonymous

Reader Rating:
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February 19, 2009: The 'Lifeline' ep, simply put, is probably the best of the JESU ep's and all around one of the best JESU releases, period. Tracks 1 and 4 alone make it worth buying. I'm not saying that the other two tracks are subpar, because they're not - they are quite solid and help make this ep as good as it is. IMO, JB has not let us down with any JESU releases so far, including the 'Pale Sketches' cd (a limited "odds and ends" record released on his very own Avalanche Records label, half of which was comprised of instrumentals). If you liked the other JESU material, you should no doubt like this as well. Also, if you are a SWANS fan, JARBOE sings on track 3.

ps. The 'Pale Sketches' cd was limited to 2000 copies and is sold out, but you can still order the vinyl (which is also limited) through Avalanche Records. Get it before it's gone and you have to download it in that crappy, thin, digitally computerized sound.