Cover of We Made God As We Sleep
ligdjs

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For fans of post-rock, listeners of experimental and instrumental music, followers of we made god, and those interested in atmospheric and emotional music experiences.
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THE REVIEW

You have to be careful when diving into a new genre; you might run into the wrong bands. With post-rock, it went well for me: We Made God NOTHING from the Island.

The first album is called As We Sleep and it's from 2008. That’s the end of the certainties; from now on, only suppositions.

This music supposes new sensations, if you pause for a moment to listen. Indeed, it's easier to be sucked in by the power unleashed by this simplicity. But if you control yourself for a second and stop to feel, perhaps new scenarios will appear. There’s no need for truths when there is possibility, an open field where you can do or at least think what you want. We are surrounded by obvious truths or assumed ones for most of our lives; we can afford forty minutes of nuances. to fantasize to realize to imagine to turn off the brain and scream.

It's the first album and you can tell; it doesn’t have the sounds and solidity of It’s Getting Colder, but to disappear you have to remove the glasses, the lisp, and the snobbery of critics, of reviewers who dance to architecture and never let go. Let go!

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Summary by Bot

The review explores We Made God's debut album 'As We Sleep', highlighting its post-rock style that invites listeners to pause and experience new sensations beyond obvious truths. Though it lacks the refinement of their later work, 'It's Getting Colder,' the album's simplicity unleashes powerful emotions. The reviewer encourages openness and letting go of critical preconceptions to fully appreciate the music's imaginative possibilities.

Tracklist Videos

01   Gizmo (04:55)

02   Bathwater (04:51)

03   Sub Rosa (03:22)

04   Deir Yassin (04:26)

05   Theory of Progress (05:41)

06   The Color (16:21)

We Made God


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