Murmur just recorded Mainlining the Lugubrious the year before in 2007(though it wasn't released until 2010), and the band went through a couple personnel changes. Mainlining was primarily Matthias Vogels -- guitars/vocals and Cory Vande Velden -- Drums, Effects, Vocals [Additional] with John Hill playing bass on a couple tracks.
Charlie Werber - drums and Shane Prendiville - Guitars/vocals joined the band just after Corey left the band for a few years(currently all back in the band as of now Sept 2020. 5-piece band).
With Shane and Charlie in the band the music started to go more into realms of avant-garde, prog, and improvisation. Let It Be Done may the most experimental in that its based a lot in improv and has a very loose structure and chaotic feel. Some basic root ideas and then just going for whatever was to happen.
Let It Be Done went unreleased as it was kind of a lost album, the new line-up finding its sound. The same 3-piece recorded Shuttle I for the Nachmystium split 7\" - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eZIt1uN4Bv8
••••••• If there is a theme for Let It Be Done, it's apocalyptic. •••••••
Part I - Slow, bleak, and sloppy. This is a basic one riff concept with Shane doing all the instruments[Guitars, moog, piano, drums, voice] .
Part II - Played by the 3-piece. Noisy, sludgy, and long. This song is built on handful of short compositions, a very basic structural map, and a lot improvisation. Guitars, moogs, drums, sporadic vocals are layered in a heavy dense mix.
Recorded, edited, mixed, and mastered by Shane Prendiville