Four months after recording with Wolf Eyes they would record Beaches and Canyons.
But Wolf Eyes has something on the rest of the American "noise" scene: a feral collective-improvisation sense.
Wolf Eyes makes off-kilter electronic music that is warmer and stranger and much less coherent.
For three-quarters of its show on Friday night Wolf Eyes was really nothing special.
Without fail Wolf Eyes' work is described as noise.
It's still a struggle to impose any musical judgment on Wolf Eyes, and that's a measure of its success.
There's improvising in a Wolf Eyes show, but it's not very interactive or musicianly.
This wasn't shaping up as a particularly good Wolf Eyes show.
Wolf Eyes knows how to create an arc: the band took a long time to get somewhere, and delivered its payoff.
Connelly moved to Michigan at the end of 2003 and joined Wolf Eyes in the spring of 2005.