Review
Trees
Lights Bane

Crucial Blast (2008) Tohm

Trees – Lights Bane cover artwork
Trees – Lights Bane — Crucial Blast, 2008

A monolithic drone keeps you on guard. You're waiting for whatever is coming, but you don't know that "what" is. The artwork of Trees' Lights Bane hints at something intense, but there's an ambiguity that accompanies it. The album, the Portland quartet's debut, has only two tracks listed, and each of them are over twelve minutes in length. Lights Bane... the bane of light? The song names seem to explain the album's title. Two songs, two representations of the absence of light, the weight of gloom: "Nothing" and "Black."

"Nothing" makes you wait for a minute before spontaneous hits of the crash welcome guttural, vicious vocals. For fifteen minutes, you think Trees could either flip the fuck out or end the song at any second. A torrential static follows every blast of guitar, filling in the gaps of what would be silence. The vocalist whispers ominously and holds out distant screams from time to time over the droning feedback until the guitar moves again, giving the song a free-form feeling. Trees take their time making "Nothing" exceptionally heavy, the sluggish composition of the song only adding to its threatening tone.

"Black" starts with what sounds like Kayo Dot's Toby Driver snarling his words. The song picks up exactly where "Nothing" left off. Perhaps Lights Bane is one composition merely broken up into two parts for accessibility. Without the division of tracks, Lights Bane would be a twenty-seven minute arrangement. The exact same tactics are used on "Black," and it is relatively hard to distinguish between the two.

With October only a few days away, I cannot help but think of Halloween. Trees would be perfect music to play at your front door while young, costume-clad "sweet tooths" approach your house. We've all heard the Halloween CD's that people use to add an evil aura to their front porches. I say pick up Lights Bane. It would work a lot better. Sounds of ghoulish laughing and chains being dragged on the ground can only be scary to a certain extent.

6.6 / 10Tohm • September 29, 2008

See also

Sunn 0))), Boris' "Amplifier Worship"

Trees – Lights Bane cover artwork
Trees – Lights Bane — Crucial Blast, 2008

Related news

JD Pinkus & Tall Tall Trees & a lot of banjo

Posted in Records on June 4, 2023

Meet Silver Moth (Mogwai, Abrasive Trees)

Posted in Bands on January 21, 2023

Recently-posted album reviews

Miller Lowlifes

Pinch Hitters
ADD Records (2025)

The debut album from Florida punk band Miller Lowlifes features a vintage baseball theme, best enjoyed with a can of cheap domestic beer in hand. The metaphor fits, as Pinch Hitters focuses on the American dream -- and where it stands in 2025. The vintage educational TV audio clips add to this past-meets-present theme. It's an album that's equally about … Read more

Art Brut

Sorry, That It Doesn't Sound Like It's Planned! Battling Satan, 2009 - 2020
Edsel Records (2025)

I’ve never reviewed a box set before but Art Brut released my favourite sprechgesang anti-art-punk album of the early aughts so I figured I’d give it a go. 2005’s Bang Bang Rock & Roll placed Art Brut among the “Art Wave” scene but was more post-punk revival than “Indie Sleaze”. Argos has cited Jonathan Richman and Axl Rose as his … Read more

The Slow Death

No Light To See
Don’t Sing Records (2025)

Few bands have as fitting a name as The Slow Death. They play forlorn, self-deprecating punk that’s heavily influenced by lonesome country. The music itself is more driving and punchy, but many of the lyrics would fit just well in a somber old-timey country ballad. It’s forceful music that punches inward instead of at The Man. The first song is … Read more