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	<title>ChaseMacri.com &#187; cave in</title>
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		<title>New Cave In!</title>
		<link>http://chasemacri.com/2010/08/08/new-cave-in/?utm_source=rss&#038;utm_medium=rss&#038;utm_campaign=new-cave-in</link>
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		<pubDate>Sun, 08 Aug 2010 23:42:26 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Chase</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[15 mins]]></category>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://chasemacri.com/?p=9098</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[I&#8217;m a huge Cave In fan. After being introduced to them via Chris Henningfeld back in 2006 when Chris was still the bass player of my old band, I&#8217;ve consumed all of their records. From 99&#8242;s metalcore masterpiece Until Your Heart Stops to last year&#8217;s EP Planets of Old, they&#8217;ve rarely miss-stepped (in fact, if [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I&#8217;m a huge Cave In fan.  After being introduced to them via Chris Henningfeld back in 2006 when Chris was still the bass player of my old band, I&#8217;ve consumed all of their records.  From 99&#8242;s metalcore masterpiece <i>Until Your Heart Stops</i> to last year&#8217;s EP <i>Planets of Old</i>, they&#8217;ve rarely miss-stepped (in fact, if you exclude their first &#8220;record&#8221; <i>Beyond Hypothermia</i> since it was really a collection of 7&#8243; releases rather than a proper album, they&#8217;re probably one of the few bands of which I can say &#8220;<a href="http://www.invisibleoranges.com/2010/07/i-celebrate-the-guys-entire-catalogue/" target="_blank">I celebrate the guy&#8217;s entire catalogue</a>.&#8221;) </p>
<p>Well, I just heard today via <a href="http://lambgoat.com/news/view.aspx?id=14928">Lambgoat</a> and <a href="http://www.theprp.com/2010/08/08/news/cave-in-readying-new-album/">the PRP</a> that at a show last night (August 7th) in Cambridge, MA they announced that they are in the midst of finishing up a new album entitled <i>White Silence.</i>  The record will be around 9 songs, and will be primarily of new material.  It should be released by their long-time label Hydra Head.  Great news!</p>
<p>Unfortunately, that is the extent to the news.  I want to know more!  I want to hear a new song and see the album artwork (even though I can&#8217;t imagine anyone has even begun to think about making artwork for the record given it&#8217;s unfinished.)  After a quick search on Youtube I found a clip of one of the new songs.  Check out &#8220;Centered&#8221; <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vyYzDXltDK4" >here</a>.  Sounds pretty awesome.  I can&#8217;t wait to hear a proper mp3.</p>
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		<title>Mixtape #2</title>
		<link>http://chasemacri.com/2009/08/09/mixtape-2-2/?utm_source=rss&#038;utm_medium=rss&#038;utm_campaign=mixtape-2-2</link>
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		<pubDate>Mon, 10 Aug 2009 02:40:08 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Chase</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[15 mins]]></category>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://chasemacri.com/?p=1484</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[On Wednesday I finished my response mixtape to my friend Travis. The mix was a two parter, as I felt like I needed to give him one mix of &#8220;hardcore&#8221; stuff and a second of non-aggressive/heavy/screamy music so to more fully show my tastes. The first mix proved a bit difficult. I realized while putting [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>On Wednesday I finished my response mixtape to my friend Travis.  The mix was a two parter, as I felt like I needed to give him one mix of &#8220;hardcore&#8221; stuff and a second of non-aggressive/heavy/screamy music so to more fully show my tastes.  The first mix proved a bit difficult.  I realized while putting songs in iTunes and auditioning their transitions that tons and tons of songs begin and/or end with guitar feedback noise.  This fact made it kind of difficult to have one song seamlessly skip to the next.  Lucky for me, and thanks to Travis for pointing this out, in iTunes I can set a songs beginning and ending times.  I was able to trim a few moments off the beginning and endings of songs that were swelled in harsh feedback, as well as speed up fade outs or portions of silence.  What a convenient little trick.  Anyway, here&#8217;s a list of the songs I put on the mix: </p>
<p>1.) &#8220;Just Do It&#8221; by Breather Resist from <em>Only in the Morning.</em><br />
2.) &#8220;Suicide Soundtrack&#8221; by Scarlet from <em>Cult Classic.</em><br />
3.) &#8220;Framce&#8221; by Botch from <em>An Anthology of Dead Ends</em>.<br />
4.) &#8220;Gleamer&#8221; by Intronaut from <em>Void</em>.<br />
5.) &#8220;There Will Be No More Scum&#8221; by Frodus from <em>And We Washed Our Weapons in the Sea.</em><br />
6.) &#8220;The Deadly Rhythm&#8221; by Refused from <em>The Shape of Punk to Come</em>.<br />
7.) &#8220;Gift&#8221; by Old Man Gloom from <em>Christmas</em>.<br />
8.) &#8220;Eagles Become Vultures&#8221; by Converge from <em>You Fail Me</em>.<br />
9.) &#8220;Guignol Serene&#8221; by Trap Them from <em>Seizures in Barren Praise</em>.<br />
10.) &#8220;Go Ape&#8221; by Spitfire from <em>Self-Help</em>.<br />
11.) &#8220;Hexagram&#8221; by the Deftones from their self-titled LP.<br />
12.) &#8220;I Hate Almost Every Person I Come In Contact With&#8221; by Curl Up and Die from <em>We May Be Through With the Past&#8230;</em> EP.<br />
13.) &#8220;43% Burnt&#8221; by the Dillinger Escape Plan from <em>Calculating Infinity</em>.<br />
14.) &#8220;Mirrorf***** &#8221; by Young Widows from <em>Settle Down City</em>.<br />
15.) &#8220;January 1979&#8243; by mewithoutYou from <em>Catch For Us the Foxes</em>.<br />
16.) &#8220;D.E.A.D.R.A.M.O.N.E.S.&#8221; by Modern Life is War from <em>Witness</em>.<br />
17.) &#8220;Cayman Tongue&#8221; by Cave In from their brand new EP <em>Planets of Old</em>.</p>
<p>Overall I&#8217;m pretty satisfied.  For my taste in hardcore and metal it was pretty difficult to get the mix to breath a little and not have every song hit like a sledgehammer.  I also included a few cuts that I hoped my intended audience would enjoy since he&#8217;s not entirely &#8220;into&#8221; hardcore.  The Frodus song and the mewithoutYou song I might have saved for a different mix, but they definitely helped keep things more varied.  </p>
<p>Anyone making any mixes lately?</p>
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		<title>Converge article</title>
		<link>http://chasemacri.com/2005/04/05/converge-article/?utm_source=rss&#038;utm_medium=rss&#038;utm_campaign=converge-article</link>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 06 Apr 2005 02:37:38 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Chase</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Culture]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[jacob bannon]]></category>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://chasemacri.com/?p=758</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[A paper I wrote for Rock Music History about Converge. Converge Paper for Rock Music History Prof. Andrea Johnson May 5th, 2005 Converge is arguable one of the most important hardcore bands since Black Flag, Minor Threat, Agnostic Front and Sick of It All.  Converge, along with a few other bands in the early nineties, [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>A paper I wrote for Rock Music History about Converge.</p>
<p><span>Converge Paper for Rock Music History<br />
Prof. Andrea Johnson<br />
May 5th, 2005</p>
<p>Converge is arguable one of the most important hardcore bands since Black Flag, Minor Threat, Agnostic Front and Sick of It All.  Converge, along with a few other bands in the early nineties, pioneered the metalcore subgenre of hardcore.  Their last two critically acclaimed releases, Jane Doe and You Fail Me, set Converge apart from an increasingly amalgamating hardcore and metal scene that is filled with uninteresting and unoriginal copycat artists.</p>
<p>Converge was formed in Boston, Massachusetts in 1990 by founders Jacob Bannon, vocalist, and Kurt Ballou, guitarist (the line-up currently is filled out by bassist Nate Newton and drummer Ben Koller.)   They started out performing covers of their favorite metal and punk songs but quickly wrote their own material and recorded several demos.  They were signed to the indie record label Hydrahead in 1996 and released their first full-length album “Halo in a Haystack.”  Both “Halo” and their second album “Caring and Killing” were thrashy, youthful, punk influenced hardcore that exemplified the band’s chaotic energy and was a very good sign of what was to come next.</p>
<p>Converge’s following two albums “Petitioning the Empty Sky” (1997) and “When Forever Comes Crashing” (1998) set the benchmark for metallic hardcore that many bands still follow to this day.  Jacob Bannon’s introspective and emotionally charged lyrics are like a poetic outpour of his heart added only more weight to his caustic, throat-searing vocals.  The albums allowed Converge to stay “ahead of a hardcore scene now dominated by uninspired mosh-metal while perfectly reflecting hardcore’s upcoming twists and turns, in the process dictating a number of them” (Punkinsider, par. 6).</p>
<p>Around the same time as “Petitioning” and “Forever,” vocalist Jacob Bannon completed art school for graphic design and started doing album artwork for many bands including Converge, Cave In, Poison the Well and American Nightmare (Give Up the Ghost) among others.    Bannon’s father was a painter who sold his work to help pay the bills and put food on the table.  It was his father’s work that influenced Bannon to create artwork to begin with.  He has a whole philosophy of combining both the aural and the visual arts into a whole experience.  “Music is a kinetic and primal thing for me, where visual art&#8217;s power lies in its subtle narrative and composition. Marrying the two approaches has always been a goal and motivational factor for me” (Wonka Vision, par. 5).</p>
<p>After “Forever” Converge released two split EPs that pushed the band to the complicated extremes of technical metal preparing the legions of hardcore enthusiasts for an album that would change the face of hardcore, metal and punk unlike Refused’s “The Shape of Punk to Come” ever did.  The haunting concept album about despair and loss, Jane Doe was released by Equal Vision Records in 2001, with a 28-page booklet of artwork by Bannon, and received acclaim from critic and consumer a like.  The album topped nearly every hardcore magazines “album of the year” charts as well gave Converge commercial recognition.  Jane Doe is a cathartic journey in twelve steps that delve deep into Bannon’s soul revealing the pain and suffering of a failed relationship of five years.  Musically, the album is relentlessly heavy and some of the most technical work Converge has ever done but still carrying emotional weight and dynamics.  Converge reached a level more intense, more harsh, more painful and more full of life then any of their previous efforts.</p>
<p>2002 saw many doors open for Converge as they headlined many tours across the US, Europe, Canada and Japan and played nearly every major hardcore/metal festival among such legendary acts as Slayer, Hatebreed and Motörhead.  In 2003, Converge released the huge “The Long Road Home” DVD that was filled with five years of live performances as well as three whole live sets and a music video for the song “Downpour.”  Converge also released an album of rarities and previously unreleased demos called “Unloved and Weeded Out” to give back to the underground hardcore community that had given so much to them by presenting music back from their roots.</p>
<p>The following year Converge entered the studio to record their fifth and most recent album “You Fail Me.”  The follow-up to the seminal “Jane Doe” had very high expectations to meet.  “You Fail Me,” like “Jane Doe,” is also a concept album.  For Jacob Bannon, “Jane Doe” was a purging that he hoped would bring a sense of closure to the ending of his five year relationship.  “In the end, I didn&#8217;t feel any better—there was no clarity in it for me.”  “You Fail Me” picks up where “Jane Doe” left off lyrically about several subjects including loss, failure and how to cope with it.  Bannon says that “these are our songs of failure—how we fail each other and ourselves. It&#8217;s about standing up and taking responsibility… It&#8217;s about putting the practice of living in front of the act of dying every day. It&#8217;s about surviving” (Skratch, par. 6).</p>
<p>“You Fail Me” was produced by Converge’s guitarist Kurt Ballou at his Godcity recording studios as well as Magpie, and Witch Doctor studios.  Musically, Converge treads new ground they had not attempted on previous albums including the sparse, western-styled guitar intro “First Light” and the acoustic song in the middle of the album “In Her Shadow.”  Past Converge albums have been consistently pedal-to-the-metal, full-on volume, 100% intensity and Converge’s approach to “You Fail Me” was to hold back.  “It kind of was because you get four dudes with ADD together and put them in a room and give them guitars, they&#8217;re just going to try to go nuts all the time. Especially in a band like Converge where that&#8217;s what we&#8217;ve done for a long time, it was an experiment to see what we could keep ourselves from doing” (Bassplayer, par. 2).  What “You Fail Me” is instead of being an all out riffing contest is a solid, well defined, emotional roller coaster of an album that is united more so in its simplicity then its complexity.   “We just wanted to write cohesive songs and in order to do that, we realized we needed to [calm down] a little bit. By the same token, I think this record is equally, if not more, intense than ‘Jane Doe’ is because I think it&#8217;s a lot more to the point than ‘Jane Doe’” (Bassplayer, par. 2).</p>
<p>“You Fail Me” is a return to Converge’s roots of punk just as much as it is a progression.  “Black Cloud,” “Drop Out,” “Heartless” and “Death King” among others are very similar to Converge’s earlier albums and very punk influenced.  While “Last Light,” “You Fail Me” and the ending of “Eagles Become Vultures” is an entirely new development of what I like to call “epic” hardcore.</p>
<p>Specifically now I will focus on the examination of “First Light” and “Last Light.”  “First Light” is an intro track of one minute in length that proceeds right into “Last Light” so I feel the two songs are really meant to be one.</p>
<p>“First Light” is in G minor.  There is no specific meter and has a sparse and ambient feel to the song.  It begins with a slight feedback swell and a single guitar soaked in reverb with overdrive.  The intro sets the mood for the album as well as sets up the main harmonic idea for “Last Light.”</p>
<p>The responsive “Last Light” opens with the full band, the guitars are rising from a G to a C, and then an F to a G# while the drums keep the beat unsteady by playing a continually roll on the snare and toms.  The vocals entire right away with a more understandable yell rather than all out screaming.  The lyrics are talking about how we need each other to be strong amidst all our struggles and hurts even when it does not make sense or does not mean anything to continue on.  The main progression is played twice and a D diminished power chords is repeated twice before repeating the A section again with more intensity and fuller chord sonorities.  The D diminished chord is repeated exactly as before which bridges “Last Light” into a recapitulation of the chord progression from “First Light.”</p>
<p>This time through the chord progression the drums and bass accompany the guitar.  The second time through, the vocals enter and the guitar backs off and plays simpler to leave room for the vocals and the drum rolls.  After this section the guitar applies a phaser effect to exemplify the intensity of the words “Keep breathing, keep fighting, keep searching, keep pushing on” that the vocalist is now screaming instead of yelling like he has up until this point in the song.  The added intensity and dynamic level in the instruments and vocals emphasize the intensity of the struggle that the vocalist is urging us to keeping fighting through.</p>
<p>After the screamed section the vocals cut out but the instruments continue the same progression one more time through and then drop out to a single palm-muted guitar playing the same chords but with less strums.  The drums crescendo during this section to what in hardcore is called the “breakdown” (which is usually a groove based drum beat over a distinctive repeated rhythm in the guitar and bass) at the end of the song.  Before reaching the climax, the vocals crescendo on the line “This is for the heart’s still beating” and repeats “beating” two times before the breakdown commences.</p>
<p>The D diminished chord from our first chord progression is brought back here and repeated in a series of two, four and six quarter notes with a slightly less than quarter note pause between each repetition.  This motive is repeated 6 times and ends with just two quarter note hits on the same chord.  The drums during this section will build into a beat for hits two and four but then accent the six hits of the last part of the motive.  There are no vocals here which lead me to believe that the rhythmic ending is a response to the lyric “this is for the heart’s still beating.”  That line is about how we are all responsible for helping each other through our struggles and failures.  Our efforts are for all the heart’s still beating.  The violent and unsteady nature of the ending breakdown exemplifies that helping out our fellow man is not easy and could be a very painful task.</p>
<p>Converge, in my opinion, is one the most innovative and original hardcore bands I have ever heard.  Having loved there music since they day I first heard “Thaw” from “Jane Doe” I now appreciate them so much more after learning about their beginnings and how strongly they feel about the underground hardcore scene and staying true to that.  Converge is a band that I truly respect for who they are as individuals as well as for their honest and emotional music.</p>
<p><strong>Bibliography</strong></p>
<p>Magazines/Journal Articles</p>
<p>Childers, Oakland L.  Converge &#8211; singer Jacob Bannon &#8211; Brief Article &#8211; Interview.  Thrasher Magazine.  May, 2002.</p>
<p>&lt;http://www.findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m0JSE/is_2002_May/ai_84668842&gt;</p>
<p>Gordon, Bill.  A Careful Balance of the Personal and the Professional: an Interview with Jacob Bannon.  Wonka Vision Magazine.  Retrieved May 4, 2005.</p>
<p>&lt;http://www.wonkavisionmagazine.com/jacobbannoninterview.htm&gt;</p>
<p>Websites</p>
<p>Bassplayer.com.  Nate Newton of Converge.  Epitaph Records.  Retrieved May 4, 2005.  &lt;http://www.epitaph.com/news/article.php?id=2103&gt;</p>
<p>Gramlich, Chris.  Converge: Innovation Through Suffering.  August 30, 2001.  Retrieved May 4, 2005.</p>
<p>&lt;http://www.exclaim.ca/index.asp?layid=22&amp;csid=1&amp;csid1=779&gt;</p>
<p>Converge.  Biography.  Loudside.  Retrieved May 4, 2005.  &lt;http://www.loudside.com/bands/?bandID=300#BIOGRAPHY&gt;</p>
<p>Punkinsider.  Converge.  Biography.  Punkinsider.  2005.  Retrieved May 4, 2005.</p>
<p>&lt;http://www.punkinsider.com/main.php?page=band&amp;band=Converge&gt;</p>
<p>Roeschlein, Shane.  You Fail Me. Review.  The Music Edge.  Retrieved May 4, 2005.</p>
<p>&lt;http://www.themusicedge.com/moxie/news/reviews/converge.shtml&gt;</p>
<p>Schwegler, Andy.  Converge This: Interview with Jacob Bannon of Converge.  Schwegweb.  Retrieved May 4, 2005.</p>
<p>&lt;http://www.schwegweb.com/features/feat_converge.html&gt;</p>
<p><strong>Appendices</strong></p>
<p>Lyrics “Last Light”</p>
<p>I need you to be the strength of widows and soul survivors<br />
I need you to be as fearless as new mothers and new fathers<br />
I need you to be the hope of heart’s who lost true love<br />
I need you to be the might of their first kiss<br />
I need a purpose and I need a reason<br />
I need to know that there is trophy and meaning<br />
To all that we lose and all we fight for<br />
To all our loves and our wars<br />
Keep breathing<br />
Keep living<br />
Keep searching<br />
Keep pushing on<br />
Keep bleeding<br />
Keep healing<br />
Keep fading<br />
Keep shining on<br />
This is for the hearts still beating</span></p>
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