Yesterday and today I have paid and am paying attention to two bands that in my mind are connected because of the kind of music they make, The Boxer Rebellion and The Twilight Sad. Although there are noticeable differences, both play music containing pathos and both have one foot firmly in the 1980s rock of bands like U2, Simple Minds and Big Country. Besides, both were on my long list but did not make it to the blog after their albums' release but do after the CDs were sent to me and I started playing them a lot. So let's take a closer look today at The Twilight Sad.
I can imagine people asking me 'how can you compare these two bands?' Well, just because of what I've written. It is all in the pathos in the music and the dreamy quality that is part of both band's music. That said, The Twilight Sad goes for the big picture, for having a sound that can fill stadiums and arenas. Everything is at least two notches larger. Songs on It's The Long Goodbye simply explode.
This is not the full picture though. As a listener you have to keep your focus, as behind and around the bombastic guitars lie the details that make It's The Long Goodbye a rich listening experience. The Twilight Sad knows how to make a song more interesting and a lot of these facets come from added keyboards.
The Twilight Sad started as a band in 2003 and with It's The Long Goodbye releases its sixth record. In 2026 it is only a duo, James Alexander Graham, vocals and Andy MacFarlane, guitars. In the studio they were joined by David Jeans on drums and Alex Mackay on bass. Add some help from long time friend Robert Smith of The Cure in a few songs and we're there. Together they are able to puff up the songs in a grand way.
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| Photo: Abbey Raymonde |
With 'Dead Flowers' the album is half way. The song already starts out with a lot of noise and gets bigger and bigger for the whole of the seven minutes it lasts and I'm on board for the whole of the way. Hear the Simple Minds styled keyboards and all they do is make the song better and better. Next up is the single 'Waiting For The Phone Call' that alerted me to what was coming. Robert Smith adds some guitar playing. At the time I wrote "this song will eat you alive" and I notice it still does. Okay, Graham sings a little like Morrissey here but that's easily forgiven, given the force 'Waiting For The Phone Call' is.
In other words, where circa forty years ago I had switched off an album by then to play the other side at a later date, I'm rolling full steam ahead with It's The Long Goodbye ('Designed To Lose'!, Attempt A Crash Landing - Theme'!)). Maybe bands are just better today albeit far less original, as yes, I have heard this kind of music before. With the difference that I simply like it so much more in 2026.
(And then I notice that my download has the order of songs wrong. It doesn't take away anything from the power I've experienced listening to It's The Long Goodbye.)
Wout de Natris - van der Borght
You can listen to and order It's The Long Goodbye here:
https://thetwilightsad.bandcamp.com/album/its-the-long-goodbye


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