Product Details
A City by the Light Divided

A City by the Light Divided
Thursday

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Track Listing

  1. The Other Side Of The Crash/ Over and Out (Of Control)
  2. Counting 5-4-3-2-1
  3. Sugar In The Sacrament
  4. At This Velocity
  5. We Will Overcome
  6. Arc – Lamps, Signal Flares, A Shower Of White (The Light)
  7. Running From The Rain
  8. Telegraph Avenue Kiss
  9. The Lovesong Writer
  10. Into The Blinding Light
  11. Autumn Leaves Revisited

Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #81691 in Music
  • Released on: 2006-05-02
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Format: Enhanced

Customer Reviews

Falling In Love All Over Again5
Have you ever had a band you liked, but sort of took for granted? Like when they aren't touring or putting out music, you kind of forget what it is you like about them? Well, that is the case with me and Thursday. Like most people, I was a fan with my first listen of "Full Collapse," and when 2003's "War All The Time" came out, I was all over it. However, since that time, the band has slipped under the radar a bit, and I sort of forgot about Thursday. Maybe it's the fact that there are about a hundred bands out right now that dumb down Thursday's sound to make it their own, and the fact that the scene they helped create is one ugly mess. Well, with "A City By The Light Divided," Thursday return stronger than ever and take one giant step forward.

There is a noticeable difference between this, their fourth effort, and the three other albums. Not as polished as "War All The Time," "A City By The Light Divided" takes a more lo-fi approach. Frontman Geoff Rickley sounds like he is straining to make himself heard over the crashing drums and dominant guitars, but still sounds as great as ever. In fact, I'd say this is lyrically his best outing. The sound is hard to understand, but just trust that it works. Take the songs "Running From The Rain" and "Sugar In The Sacrament," two songs that head into U2 territory, and can only be described as glorious. The night I bought this album, I fell asleep with this songs running over and over in my head. No doubt, these are the best examples of how the band has grown. However, standard Thursday fare is still present with the single "Counting 5-4-3-2-1," "Telegraph Avenue Kiss" and "The Other Side Of The Car Crash," which is roughly a sequel to their signature song, "Understanding In A Car Crash."

This could very well be Thursday's best album to date. Maybe it's the fact that 2006 has been a somewhat barren year for music, and this album has hit me so hard, but I'd say Thursday are onto something here. They still maintain what made them great, all while moving away from a very stale genre. There aren't really any bands in their genre making timeless music (Thrice and A.F.I. are the only other examples I could think of) but Thursday pull it off. A perfect album, "A City By The Light Divided" has me falling in love all over again.

thursday's masterpiece...5
i've been a huge thursday fan since i got "full collapse" back in 2002 and i think that is one of the best albums i own. i then picked up their older work "waiting" and i thought it was fairly good even though it was very raw sounding and underproduced. then 2003 came and "war all the time" was released and that too was an awesome release but not quite as good as "full collapse".

now, a mere 3 years later (after going through personal hells, says geoff rickly) they released "a city by the light divided". when i first heard it, i was really shocked and amazed altogether. it sounded alot different from anything released from the band. It was more atmostpheric, darker, more epic sounding, and geoff's vocals sounded distant in the songs adding a weird vibe to them. i'm not sure why thursday went with the recording style they went with, because geoff's vocals sound kind of drowned out by the wailing/intricate guitars but yet i can't help loving it at the same time. this is clearly musical progression, no doubt, and you can hear a little from every thursday album on here, especially "waiting" and "full collapse".

not only is the whole cd a solid piece of art, geoff's lyrics are clever and intelligent as ever, as well as his singing range reaching new heights. i think geoff's distinct, unique voice really separates this band from what's out there. his voice is so emotional, angsty, dark, harsh, and honest altogether.

this album is a huge progression for the band and i'm surprised they did such a leap being signed on a major label. their progression kind of reminds me of the one thrice did with "vheissu". that was thrice's beautiful masterpiece, as is this is thursday's beautiful masterpiece. the album sounds very big and will become an epic in my cd collection. I could honestly say thursday could call it quits tomorrow (god forbid) and feel closure and peace with themselves as inviduals and as a band due to this release. thursday has made a career album with "a city by the light divided".

it seems every song is amazing and has different standouts but i think the best song on the cd is "running from the rain". this is the best song thursday has ever created. it's very atmospheric and the eerie guitar parts and sounds are captivating to say the least. the song is one of those songs that gives you certain imagery when listening to it. for me, it made me feel like i was walking on abandoned train tracks at night, feeling very isolated and secluded while looking up at the sky. Then at a distance, i could see lightning fueling the sky and hearing the distance rumbles of thunder as a violent storm is approaching me (all the while feeling very peaceful). yeah, it's that atmospheric! then there is the song "at this velocity" which is the most ferocious and screaming song thursday has ever done. and that is really the only screams you'll find on the album (besides a few)as for geoff has really found his singing ability and does a lot of it. please, do yourself a favor and pick up this epic album from thursday. thursday fans will like it 100% while others might not appreciate this progression, but i promise you will if you give it time and some listens. HIGHLY RECOMMENDED...

A Powerful, Matured Release by Thursday5
In CBTLD, Thursday displays a cleaner, certainly more mature sound. The lyrics are, as always, intelligent and abstract, but seem to allow the listener a little more clarity into the writer's intentions.

The songs come across as being crisp and controlled. Gone are the out-of-control wailings of Full Collapse (this change can be interpreted as either positive or negative). The "screamo" aesthetic is replaced by a measured, yet just as powerful, musical roller coaster of tempo and vocal range.

The themes are, in many ways, a departure from the direction established by War All the Time. Rather than focusing on "larger" issues, such as homophobia, CBTLD is personal. The songs are about love, loss, and mortality ('Autumn Leaves Revisited' gave me the same chills as Death Cab's 'What Sarah Said').

Overall, CBTLD does not seem to favor Full Collapse or WATT. Rather, it seems to draw the positive elements from both albums. CBTLD takes the crisp, clean sound of WATT and blends it with the personal, accessible themes of Full Collapse. Interestingly, it references Full Collapse and 5 Stories directly more than once (just look at the song titles...'Other Side of the Crash,' 'At This Velocity,' 'Autumn Leaves Revisited'). In doing so, Thursday has successfully given a new, matured perspective on emotions that were first referenced when we all heard Full Collapse for the first time.

Overall, CBTLD provides the model for a band looking to evolve musically while still maintaining its thematic integrity and its obligations to the listeners.