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MP3 The New Trust - Dark Is The Path Which Lies Before Us

The 2nd album by TNT is a collection of songs written between 2004-2006, after many US and European tours. With lyrical subjects ranging from zombies to infidelity to evolution, "Dark Is The Path..." is twice as long, tight and thoughtful as their debut.

13 MP3 Songs in this album (37:28) !
Related styles: Rock: Punk, Rock: Experimental Rock, Type: Lyrical

People who are interested in Jawbox Meneguar No Knife should consider this download.


Details:
The North Bay Bohemian, January 2007
"Banded Together: The New Trust explore the perils of disconnect"

On a Sunday afternoon last July, as wind rustled through the tall trees and crows alighted on brick walls, dozens of musicians and fans gathered at one of Santa Rosa''s oldest and most beloved mansions for a photo shoot. The enormous palatial house, whose façade served in the filming of Pollyanna, was eerily bare inside. In one of the mansion''s elegant sitting rooms, photographer and New Trust guitarist Sara Sanger gazed down into an antique Hasselblad camera, sizing up her assorted black-clad, tattooed subjects on the opposite wall. Once the shot seemed good, she grabbed a gigantic machete and joined the motley tableau.

"OK, here''s the deal," announced her assistant. "The zombies have attacked. The zombies have eaten everyone we know and love, and laid everything to waste. We''re all hiding away in this house, preparing for our retaliation." Getting into character, a few of the subjects thrust their heads back to look more assured. "And remember," the assistant emphasized, just before the camera shutter clicked, "all we have is each other."

The New Trust are certainly a band of togetherness; all four of the members live under the same roof in a large Victorian house. Rock bands traditionally fight nonstop, but the New Trust are strangely functional. They often cook for or clean up after each other at home, and they''ve also toured together multiple times, covering the United States and Europe. And yet the band are poised to release a new album in which the perils of disconnect take center stage.

Dark Is the Path Which Lies Before Us, due Jan. 23 on Slowdance Records, is a collection of tight, well-crafted songs with a recurring, ominous undercurrent of personal, political and global betrayal. This is a grandiose maneuver for a band whose debut EP (2003''s We Are Fast Moving Motherfuckers, We Are Women and Men of Action) clocked in at 18 minutes of short, sharp shock. They''ve now come up with something that reads like a screenplay as much as it sounds like a fantastically fresh rock ''n'' roll record.

As a clean calendar presented itself, New Trust frontman Josh Staples walked off a New Year''s Day hangover among the dead at the city graveyard, explaining his latest songwriting approach. "In the ''80s, 30 years after the dawn of rock music, there was something called ''modern rock.'' Now, 30 years after the dawn of punk music, why not have ''modern punk''?" Sitting on an unkempt concrete crypt, he explains. "Punk rock that''s a little more nuanced and interesting--that''s how I see this band."

Surely, the 1980s infect Dark Is the Path in subtle ways. Of the tracks, "Holy Wars" is a melodic transmutation of Billy Idol; "You''ve Got to Be Fucking Shitting Me" cites Kate Bush; and "The Life of the Infidel Comes Crashing Down" directly quotes one-hit wonder Jermaine Stewart''s "We Don''t Have to Take Our Clothes Off." But while the New Trust''s music is more complex than the Dead Kennedys--interloping guitar lines from Sanger and Matthew Izen weave fluidly over Staples'' contrapuntal bass lines and Julia Lancer''s rock-solid drumming--the gut of a 1980s punk song remains the same. In fact, the album''s targets are the very institutions that punk bands have been screaming about for the last three decades.

"I think I''ve always written songs in that way," Staples says, "but I wrote lyrics in other bands before that were so specific and clear that it came off as being very trite and stupid and childish." Instead, Dark Is the Path uses inventive images in a lyrical landscape full of strange lacerations, tidal waves and shooting flames as its toppling tools. "The stuff I like is difficult to get your head around," he explains, "conceptual horror stuff that, because it''s so abstract and because it comes out of left field, makes it a little scarier and a lot more effective."

Even the album''s love songs hinge on this element, where the sweet touch of lips is akin to a blood-draining bite on the neck. ("It seems like it should be a very positive thing--affection between two people should be great, right?" asks Staples, who has been married to Sanger for five years. "But I know that it takes very little to make a big mistake, and it can be very horrible.") But the song that most listeners will inevitably latch on to is "When the Dead Start Rising," the story of a full-scale zombie attack and the inspiration for last summer''s photo shoot.

Not unlike an armed group of renegades cloistered together in a grand deserted palace, the song evokes a mixture of refined classicism and vigilante defiance with a call for friends and comrades. "That song, and the whole album, really," clarifies Staples, "has more to do with who we''re picking to take with us on our side. Like, when shit goes down, who do you have at hand that''s going to go with you?"

For the New Trust, togetherness may well be the best antidote to their own apocalyptic visions of the rising undead. It''s also proven a catalyst for the hardworking band that adheres to a 10-year plan, including more touring this year and a new metal-tinged record already in the works. Staples recently left the highly acclaimed indie-rock trio the Velvet Teen in order to focus on these goals, and his creative impulse has clearly been rekindled by focusing on his own material.

"It''s almost always a money-losing venture, and it''s almost always tough on relationships and it''s almost always a struggle," he shrugs as the New Years'' dwindling sun casts long shadows across the graveyard. "But if you have that artist''s mental disorder where you think your shit is the best shit out there, and if you''re that excited and inspired about something, and if you believe in it," he says, "then that''s the best thing about making music or art: you created it, and it''s your favorite thing ever."

~ Gabe Meline




Impose Magazine: Review of "Dark Is The Path Which Lies Before Us"

Nestled amongst the serene pastures and woodlands of Northern California’s upper Bay Area, the sleepy city of Santa Rosa isn’t exactly a household geographic name. Shamefully, the vibrancy of its musical scenery is also relatively under the radar. While I’m sure some folks like their native secrets kept under tongue, when dealing with such inspirational enclaves, I tend to feel inclined to spread the good word.

Over the years, the collective members of the New Trust have all played their part in keeping their local arts community afloat. They’ve ran record labels, toiled away in countless bands, played host to punk-minded pseudo-orphanages, magnetized touring acts, so forth and so on. With the grass roots torches still ablaze, the four of them now live together in a quaint little duplex on one of downtown’s lesser-known tree-lined streets. It’s not the typical band house type ordeal. There’s no piss bottles, all night ragers, or interfamilial fist fights. On the contrary, it’s the type of evolutionary living situation that all of us semi-counterculture dirtballs could hope to gracefully grow into. Josh Staples (vocals, bass) and Sara Sanger (guitars, vocals) are married and have a couple of cats. Matthew Izen (guitars) and Julia Lancer (drums) are not romantically involved, but they live upstairs and also have a cat. More importantly, while the real world continues to offer up its sugar-coated brand of arsenic, all four members, despite being relatively strapped, remain diligently committed to an ethos of productivity, progression and protest.

The full length follow up to the band’s 2004 E.P. release, We Are Fast Moving Motherfuckers, Dark Is The Path That Lies Before Us is an enchanting amalgamation of modern indie-rock, classic pop melody, and everything you loved about post-punk’s origins. Managing to maintain the fundamental characteristics of their sound while breaking free of formulation, the band abandons one the integral rules of engagement from their first record and now embraces songs that stretch beyond the two minute mark. The result is a set of tracks that always remain consistently interesting, but never drag on.

Bearing rich dynamic complexity and straight-on accessibility is a rare ability that the New Trust have a knack for: The Path’s guitars interweave in angular counter-parted interplay and return to blistering power chords seamlessly; Staples’ alto swoons and Sanger’s PJ Harvey-esque bellows bind in call and response compliment; frame working drum and low-end syncopation keep the crash course navigation grounded. Lyrically, ink with coal-black undertones of apocalyptic triumph and peril sets the general tone, but there’s plenty of direct relevance to go around. If “I pledge allegiance to the fags, the immigrants, the drunks, the disenfranchised punks” doesn’t get your heart beating, what will? Thirteen bangers in under forty minutes – here’s an unstoppable one for the soft ones, calloused ones, little ones, and the jaded prog-punks who need a little light on their way down the road less traveled.

~ Brian Moss

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