Outside the Unbearable Grows

by Mico

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Lina Tres 03:01
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about

What makes Mico such a fascinating band to listen to is that they manage to use what's becoming a fairly standard set of tools to make something that sounds truly special. If you dissected Mico's songs into individual elements and listened to them out of context, you'd hear lots of the same features you hear in the burgeoning post-hardcore / emo scene. However Mico comes off sounding far, far more mature than their contemporaries. Despite the trend and potential financial rewards, they seem to have little interest in trying to appeal to that crowd.
Mico shares a quality with their neighbours the Weakerthans in that their lyrics walk a fine line between personal and political. While songs like "Your Everyday Apocalypse" and "The Great Achievement" are overtly political in their lyrics, they avoid sounding preachy. There's a sobering quality to them. For a band with a somewhat low profile and at times underwhelming presence in your stereo, it's amazing how inspiring some of these tracks really are.
Especially given the types of singing we get from other post-hardcore acts, John Stewart's vocals must be commended. They never drop their mature tone or break into clichéd lyrical gimmicks (shrieking, faux-vulnerability, etc). It says something about this genre when I'm proud to comment that Stewart can actually hold a tune. Instrumentally the band is very tight and more concerned with layered song compositions then letting any one musician break into a solo. I wouldn't be surprised if Mico's wrote collectively and didn't have a principle songwriter.
Quiet moments make the title track truly interesting as the band's three guitarists create an atmosphere that effortlessly shifts from dense to minimalist. To their credit the only comparison's I see to Mico's sound is in bands I greatly respect: "The Great Achievement" is on the same plane as Red Animal War. The spacey "Roads Travelled by Everyone" brings to mind Sparta. "Lina Tres" has shades of Hot Water Music.
Yet for all these similarities, Mico never sounds derivative. "Outside The Unbearable Grows" is an incredibly consistent and well-paced record. The track ordering creates a very effective flow between their rock songs and slower material. As Mico makes no obvious attempt to write pop-hooks into their songs, it works far better as a complete album than it does in small doses. Throw on a pair of headphones and you can lose yourself in it. - Punknews.org

The evolution of Winnipeg's Mico continues. From their beginnings in 1998 as a trio formed in the aftermath of the dissolution of Red Fisher, the band has morphed into a quintet boasting three guitar players up from one. That change explains how their music has gone from that of amped-up power trio to thick, layered emo orchestra in the vein of Static Prevails-era Jimmy Eat World. Their songs range from anything-but-simple rockers like "Revolution of Human Awakening" and "This Great Achievement" through the half-time chug of "Lina Tres" and "Retransmission" to the spiralling epics "Outside the Unbearable Grows" and "The Other World is Possible.” - Exclaim!

credits

released April 1, 2003

Recorded at Sundae Sound Studios at various points from September 2002 through February 2003

Engineered and mixed by Dave Alcock
Mastered by Dave Horrocks for Infinite Wave

Photography by Jon Schledewitz
Graphic Construction by Todd Harkness and Jon Lyne

Johnny Stewart - Vocals, Guitar, Moog, Loops
Patrick May - Guitar, Vocals, Rhodes
Todd Harkness - Guitar
Cameron Brass - Bass, Vocals
Troy Fleischhaker - Drums, Percussion

Originally released by G7 Welcoming Committee and Hopeless Records on Compact Disc and co-released on Vinyl by Does Everyone Stare/G7 Welcoming Committee, 2003

℗ 2020 DESECRATION RECORDINGS

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Mico Banff, Alberta

Formed in Banff, Canada in 1999, Mico recorded three albums with critical acclaim (the last two for G7 Welcoming Committee) and toured North America extensively. Lyrically the songs dealt with social and political issues. Environmental concerns and elements of science fiction. ... more

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