SOUNDTRACK: THE TREWS-House of Ill Fame (2003).
After listening to the new Trews disc, I popped in their first disc. Mostly because I thought their first one sounded rawer. And it does.
House of Ill Fame has the same rock feel as the new one does, but it also feels a lot more garagey. It rocks harder, with more edge. The songs are more memorable to me, mostly because they are a little more distinctive. There’s some songs where the basslines really stand out (when the guitars either drop out or play some lighter riffs).
But overall the disc just feels less polished. And it’s all the better for it.
Especially because my disc comes with a live EP. And the band really rocks live. They play louder, grittier, and with more energy. These songs really come alive on the disc. “Tired of Waiting” one of my favorite songs on the disc, segues very nicely into the Na Na part of “Hey Jude” which is a highlight on the live disc as well.
While No Time for Later is certainly enjoyable, I simply prefer the rawer sound of House of Ill Fame. I’ve not heard the middle disc, Den of Thieves, so I’m not sure if it falls somewhere in between the two or not. I’m sure the songs are solid though.
[READ: October 12, 2009] “Long Live Annie B.”
This is a dark story set in the winterlands of Saskatchewan.
Annie B. grows up in a destitute part of town with a destitute mom. With few choices, Annie B., at fifteen, decides to get involved with an older guy. Just for sex; a non-meaningful relationship. But despite the casualness Annie B. seems to get a lot out of it, at least in terms of cinematic education. She and her man watch all kinds of films (primarily horror films, but also foreign ones).
But with one action for him, she decides that she has had enough and breaks up with him.
During this relationship, Annie B’s mom has been doing everything she could to help them survive. She hasn’t resorted to Breaking and Entering (B&E being a common thing in this neck of the city), mostly just robbing grocery stores. (It somehow seems okay to steal name brand items if you’re hungry).
Clearly, there’s not much of a future for anyone here. So, when her ex-boyfriend calls on the phone, breathing heavily, standing in front of the quik mart in the freezing cold, Annie B. has a choice to make.
This was a pretty depressing story, but there was a ray of warmth in there. Somewhere.
It’s available here.

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