Review
The One A.M. Radio
This Too Will Pass

Dangerbird (2007) Toby

The One A.M. Radio – This Too Will Pass cover artwork
The One A.M. Radio – This Too Will Pass — Dangerbird, 2007

On The One A.M. Radio's 2004 full-length, A Name Writ in Water, songwriter Hrishikesh Hirway surprised critics and listeners alike with his apprehensive brand of esoterically compact and personal lo-fi composition. Falling somewhere in the dark crevice between electronica and singer/songwriter melancholia, Hirway demonstrated an almost uncanny ability to be both rhetorically personable and musically reserved. The vaguely metropolitan musical architecture swirled fluidly and cohesively, melding bleak overtones with concretely analeptic musings.

Fast forward a couple years: mired, perhaps, in the ubiquitously universal mid-twenties sense of displacement, Hirway, a Yale grad, travels to Mumbai, India to draw up the blueprints for his next release. Surrounded by the pulsating mass of bodies and heat that defines the world's second most populous country, Hirway maps out his skeletal ideas on a laptop and a microphone.

Those skeletal ideas would become the basis for The One A.M. Radio's latest release, This Too Will Pass. Darker and less confrontational than his previous efforts, This Too Will Passis lyrically imaginative, evocative, and, ultimately, more personal. Hirway has, if nothing else, mastered the ability to ethereally chart the enigmatic blue and grey territory that rests between passive torpidity and, well, happiness.

On This Too Will Pass, Hirway's homespun brand of folky electronica is transiently chromatic, wallowing in the dusky overtones that emerge as warm summer days slowly melt into humid nights. Tracks such as "Mercury," "The Echoing Airports," and "Where I'm Headed" are shakily endearing, unsure of both themselves and the world they seek to organize, rationalize, and, ultimately, describe. It is here that Hirway is at his best. Melodies soberly rise and fall behind fuzzily blurred imagery, comfortable with being uncomfortable and, at times, obtusely heart wrenching.

Throughout This Too Will Pass, Hirway, backed by a conglomerate of eight musicians, including violinist Jane Yakowitz, doggedly purses an endearing brand of flakiness. Musically, he refuses to be backed into absolutes, instead opting to breathily flutter between a variety of sounds and auras. Therein, however, lies the greatest problem with This Too Will Pass. Hirway is non-committal to a fault, recklessly, albeit airily, meandering between moods and sonance with little regard for the overall continuity of the album. The cohesive nature that defined A Name Writ in Water, has been replaced with something less categorical. In many instances, such evolution would be seen in a positive light. Here, however, the disjointed nature of the album as whole comes off as mildly distracting.

Overall, This Too Will Pass is dramatically yielding, unassumingly confessional, and afire with tasteful nostalgia. At times, however, This Too Will Passsettles for personable beauty for personable beauty's sake. And while it's certainly intoxicating, the periphery of Hirway's scope deems This Too Will Pass mutedly insignificant. This fact is somewhat disappointing because the album could have transcended simple aesthetic beauty and been, well, a classic. But it's not. Instead, This Too Will Pass, is just a very good album that is, seemingly, quite happy with being just very good. And if there is any dissatisfaction on my part, it is only because This Too Will Pass contains the promise of being more than it is.

8.3 / 10Toby • June 5, 2007

The One A.M. Radio – This Too Will Pass cover artwork
The One A.M. Radio – This Too Will Pass — Dangerbird, 2007

Related news

The One A.M. Radio Tourdates

Posted in Tours on July 10, 2007

Recently-posted album reviews

Totally Slow

The Darkness Intercepts
Refresh Records (2024)

I find Totally Slow a hard band to categorize. Their brand of melodic, hard punk is familiar and comforting -- rooted in ‘80s hardcore, ‘90s skatepunk, and post-something guitar-driven rock. The press release namedrops Dag Nasty and Hot Snakes, among others, which I think are good starting points. But while it’s familiar, it’s absolutely not a carbon copy. Like their forebearers, the songs … Read more

Steamachine

City of Death
Records Workshop (2023)

City Of Death is the third album from Polish noise makers Steamachine. Having dabbled in a few metal styles over their career, City Of Death has a heavy carnival influence to it which I have to say I really like. It's interesting just how much more sinister things sound when you pump eerie, jingly circus sounds amongst very dark, heavy, … Read more

Faulty Cognitions

Somehow, We Are Here
Cercle Social Records (2024)

The opening track on Somehow, We Are Here is a statement. Yes, Faulty Cognitions is a punk band with members of Low Culture, Shang-A-Lang, Nocturnal Prose,and more. Yes, this shares a lot of commonalities, but it’s also a new band with a new sound. The band humbly says they were going for an early, jangly R.E.M. vibe but self-confess that it has more of a Replacements thing going on … Read more