
Deadsoul
Tribe
A tree in winter – naked, the leaves have fallen, it almost desparately stretches it’s thin branches to the cloudy sky. A good many people associate dreariness with such an image, others think of loneliness, hopelessness, emptiness or even romanticism. But at any rate, Devon Graves of Dead Soul Tribe was fascinated so much by this spectacle of nature that he used it as a basic idea for his new album “The January Tree“.
With
the predecessor “A Murder of Crows“, a dead crow – on a pylon with electric
cables, it’s wings stretched as if it were crucified – served as starting point
for a fascinating concept, a unique symbiosis between poetic lyrics and
suspenseful and dramatic music. This time it’s similar: “A tree in winter is a
mirror image of today’s world. A leaf is only a leaf but it is a small wonder
that a tree lives with the help of his leaves. It is just the small things
which decide over life and death and the level inbetween”, philosophizes the
father of a family. Graves, who was born in
As
with the debut work “Dead Soul Tribe”, as well with “A
Murder of Crows”, Devon Graves did almost everything
himself on “The January Tree”: he plays guitar, bass and more flute than
before, plus keyboards and piano, he sings and produces. However, this time
drummer Adel Moustafa is responsible for the basic structures of three songs.
“‘A Murder of Crows’ remains an important work but I wasn’t able to direct my
ideas on the really right ways then. ‘Angels In Vertigo’, ‘Some Things You
Can't Return’, and ‘Feed’ are great songs but the rest of the album is more
like some additions. In retrospect, I think the differences in quality are too
big. With ‘The January Tree‘, I had finally found the self-confidence to create
almost an hour of homogeneous music without any quality differences.“
Apart
from elements typical for DST, such as the clashing of the most different
moods, the big dynamic, unusual rhythms, and an almost mesmerizing aura, on “The January
Tree“ can also be found “Just like a Timepiece“, a song which was released
on Graves‘ solo album “The Strange Mind of Buddy Lackey“ back in 1993. After
this album the singer caused a sensation – still using the pen-name Buddy
Lackey at the time – with his band Psychotic Waltz whose four albums made them
a legend and which was idolized by fans of progressive music. Graves left the
band in 1997 to free himself. “At the time I had the feeling to be the weakest
link among great instrumentalists and songwriters. In order to be able to keep
going and to work creatively I had to leave the band.“ One can find quite some
similarities between Dead Soul Tribe and Psychotic Waltz: the music is
progressive and dynamic, original und natural, individual and profound, in
short: an infectious hot and cold bath full of authentic emotions. “I
particularly feel being influenced by Zappa, Jethro Tull and Iron Maiden,“ says
Graves. “But I also find Tool or A Perfect Circle tremendously stimulating.
There are no limits, only the striving for a music which for me sounds most
beautiful.“