Dividing by Zero

Dividing By Zero
Studio album by Seven Storey
Released February 19, 2002
Genre Indie rock, punk, post-hardcore
Length 37:28
Label Deep Elm
Producer Lance Lammers
Seven Storey Mountain chronology
Based on a True Story EP (2000) Dividing By Zero (2002) At the Poles
(2007)

Dividing By Zero is the fourth studio album released by the indie rock band Seven Storey Mountain, as well as its second and final while using the shortened moniker Seven Storey. It was released on February 19, 2002 by Deep Elm Records.

Album information

Lance Lammers did all of the heavy lifting for this record. In addition to contributing vocals and guitar parts, he is also responsible for producing, engineering, recording, and mixing this album.[1] Dave Norwood played bass while Chad Kinney played drums.[1]

Finally, John Szuch at Deep Elm Records is responsible for the record's layout and design.[1]

Reception

Described as a mixture of "the emotive song structure of Washington, D.C., indie rock with the harsh playing of the New York hardcore scene",[2] Dividing By Zero received a moderate to positive reception from the critics.

Some of the record's most positive feedback came from Interpunk.com, where a critic called it "ten tracks of orchestrated rage...blending the finest aspects of hardcore power, punk energy, rock style and indie intelligence." That critic found that "[v]ocalist Lance Lammers has a perfect set of chops - equally harsh and melodic - presented with an overriding, forceful conviction" and concluded that "[t]hese are some of the best rock songs you've heard in a long, long time."[3] Dennis Scanland at Music Emission was equally free with his praise of the album. For him, members of the band "get loud but never obnoxious and they stay focused even with their loud bursts that they erupt with at times." As a result, he found that "Dividing By Zero is one of the strongest albums that I have heard so far this year," concluding that it is "nice to see a young band with as much vision as Seven Storey."[4]

J. Berk at Splendidzine wrote that "[t]he songs are jerky and intense, and provide a perfect backdrop for Lance Lammers' pissed-off vocals." Although Berk found Lammers' vocals to be "screamy at times," he was pleased that they were "mostly restrained" and that Lammers' "obvious need to vent get in the way of turning in a few gentle melodies and catchy hooks." While Berk does not appear to have fallen in love with the album, he admits that he found it "unexpectedly satisfying on an intellectual level."[5]

While some critics gave the record a more lukewarm reception, even they could not hold back completely. Bettie Lou Vegas at Ink19 listened to the record and wrote: "Seven Storey is something I would have played into the ground in 1993. While I don't salivate over it now in 2002, it's still quite good."[6] Scott at Punknews.org didn't find that record passé, instead he felt that the band might have had more to give. In his review, he wrote that "The album definitely has strong points with tracks like 'Unknown Satellite' and 'Dress Rehearsal,' but the majority of the rest of the album only displays the band's potential. Give this band 5 more years with this new lineup and I bet they'll be able to do something amazing. Until then, they're be in semi-heavy rotation on my college radio show, because that's where good rock like this belongs."[7]

Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic[2]
MusicEmissions[4]
SplendidzineModerate[5]
Ink19Favorable[6]
InterpunkFavorable [3]
Punknews[7]

Track listing

No. Title Length
1. "Instru. 1"   3:31
2. "Unknown Satellite"   3:47
3. "Flavor War"   4:10
4. "Enough Already"   4:49
5. "Second Rome"   3:43
6. "Halfway"   1:57
7. "No Return Address"   3:30
8. "Dress Rehearsal"   3:43
9. "Erase"   3:59
10. "Paper and Quill"   4:19

References

External links

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