Turntable handle

As If By Ghosts

Dreamend 2004

As If By Ghosts

A side songs

Title Lyrics Song Credits Duration Plays
play_circle_filled Of Raven and Winds
supervisor_account
Ryan Graveface
5:26 0
play_circle_filled Ellipsis
supervisor_account
Ryan Graveface
3:07 1
play_circle_filled Four Days In May
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Ryan Graveface
3:57 1
play_circle_filled The Almighty
supervisor_account
Ryan Graveface
4:47 1
play_circle_filled Murmur
supervisor_account
Ryan Graveface
4:51 0

B side songs

Title Lyrics Song Credits Duration Plays
play_circle_filled Can't Take You
supervisor_account
Ryan Graveface
4:04 0
play_circle_filled Slide Song
supervisor_account
Ryan Graveface
3:42 0
play_circle_filled The Old House and it's Occupants
supervisor_account
Ryan Graveface
5:15 0
play_circle_filled 10 Guitars from Salem
supervisor_account
Ryan Graveface
3:50 0
play_circle_filled Passing
supervisor_account
Ryan Graveface
6:24 0
About

AllMusic Review by Johnny Loftus  [-]

As if by Ghosts is the full-length debut of Chicago's Dreamend, a post-rock outfit falling somewhere between Low's skeletal drifts and the melodic meanders of Six Parts Seven. A difference from the latter is Dreamend's vocals, delivered on cuts like "Four Days in May" and "Of Ravens & Winds" in a fragile, watch-my-breath-freeze falsetto that harks to early-'90s indie pop like Cat's Miaow. However, both tracks ultimately climax with electric blizzards of guitar, so there's a refreshing love of noise on Ghosts, too. The varying screeds and whispers of the instrumental "Almighty" prove that, as does the deafening beginning of "10 Guitars From Salem." In keeping with form, "Salem" eventually trickles into an ambling post-rock progression punctuated by splashy cymbals and snare rolls. And the lead guitar is predictably swallowed by its own echoes, or the throng of other axes that fight to the forefront. This tendency illustrates the increasing challenge for post-rock artists, which is essentially to make an impression somehow, especially as its margins are more defined each year. This fact does work against Dreamend in the more template-driven portions of As if by Ghosts. But the band does divine enough individuality -- of both noisy and quiet varieties -- to warrant future observation.

 

Ryan Graveface