Origins (1999–2000) Silver Mt. Zion began as a framework for Efrim Menuck, a guitarist in Montreal-based post-rock band
Godspeed You! Black Emperor, to develop his knowledge of
music theory and music scoring, and to work on musical ideas that didn't fit into the format of his band. Menuck enlisted
violinist
Sophie Trudeau and
bassist Thierry Amar, who were also involved with Godspeed You! Black Emperor. The band made its live debut on March 6, 1999, at Musique Fragile, a performance venue organized by the record label Constellation. It released its debut album,
He Has Left Us Alone but Shafts of Light Sometimes Grace the Corner of Our Rooms..., on March 27, 2000. Godspeed You! Black Emperor rarely features vocals, relying instead on audio samples; similarly themed samples appear on Silver Mt. Zion's debut album. Menuck does sing on two tracks, "Movie (Never Made)" and "Blown-out Joy from Heaven's Mercied Hole".
Expanding membership (2000–2004) Before the release of its second album, the band recruited three more musicians, expanding the group to a sextet. The new members were
cellist Beckie Foon,
guitarist Ian Ilavsky, and
violinist Jessica Moss. The band's name was changed to The Silver Mt. Zion Memorial Orchestra & Tra-La-La Band to reflect the larger membership. In early 2001, the band set out on an extensive tour of
Europe. During their 5-hour flight to Europe, the band members wrote "The triumph of our tired eyes". Soon after their return, the album
Born Into Trouble as the Sparks Fly Upwards was written. While some tracks on
Born into Trouble […] reflect the building but repetitive and instrumental nature of the first album, some tracks are more song like in structure and rely more on vocals. On "Take These Hands and Throw Them in the River", the vocal parts finish with a building wall of noise dynamic, while "Could've Moved Mountains" has double-tracked vocals the listener has to strain to hear. With the same lineup, but with the band's name slightly expanded to reflect the change in sound and membership, The Silver Mt. Zion Memorial Orchestra & Tra-La-La Band with Choir released
"This Is Our Punk-Rock," Thee Rusted Satellites Gather + Sing in 2003. The album featured four tracks each over ten minutes and had more singing as well as greater emphasis on drums in two of the tracks. Thee Rusted Satellite Choir features 24 names. The album appeared on the !earshot National Top 50 Chart in September 2003. After a break due to
Godspeed You! Black Emperor activities, the band set out on a brief Canadian tour at end of January 2004; it then travelled to Europe, where it toured from mid-February to the end of March. That winter Scott Levine Gilmore from
Black ox orkestar joined the band and it began performing in a semi-circle onstage. After performing at the
All Tomorrow's Parties festival, the band headed across the Atlantic again in December for a tour of the
UK. The lineup was expanded again to include Gilmore, a mandolinist and guitarist. The choir dropped, and the band added an E to the first word of its name, becoming Thee Silver Mt. Zion Memorial Orchestra & Tra-La-La Band for the release of its fourth full-length record.
Horses in the Sky (2005) has six tracks, all with vocals. Following a short tour of eastern Canada in August that year, the band performed for the first time in the United States in
Brooklyn,
New York City. Plans for a longer tour were cut short after Trudeau, one of two violinists in the band, broke her collarbone. In that time, Gilmore left the band and was replaced by former
Hangedup drummer Eric Craven.
13 Blues for Thirteen Moons (2006–2008) In 2006, the band headed to Europe at the end of April and played shows until the start of June. A tour of Canada and the United States (Silver Mt. Zion's first) ran from late July to the end of August. The tour debuted two new songs, "BlindBlindBlind" and "1,000,000 Died to Make This Sound". In a follow-up 2007 tour of Europe, the band premiered two new songs, "Engine Broke Blues" and the title song of its
album, which was released in March 2008 and contains all four tracks. The album also contains 12 short tracks of
drone and feedback which feed into each other to create a fifth piece on the album, acting as a prologue to the album proper, which appropriately begins on track 13. Silver Mt. Zion then toured Europe and North America, premiering two new songs, "I Built Myself a Metal Bird, I Fed My Metal Bird the Wings of Other Metal Birds" and "There's a Light". In the summer of 2008, the band's lineup changed again as Craven, Foon and Ian Ilavsky resigned. After they left, the band lost the words "tra-la-la band" from its name. At that time David Payant joined as drummer and the band officially renamed itself Thee Silver Mt. Zion Memorial Orchestra. In September that year the new lineup played at the New York ATP Festival.
Vic Chesnutt collaboration and Kollaps Tradixionales (2009–2010) The members of Thee Silver Mt. Zion contributed to two works by
Vic Chesnutt: the 2007 album
North Star Deserter and the 2009 album
At the Cut. Both were released by Constellation Records. In the spring of 2009, the band began working on recording material for its album
Kollaps Tradixionales, released in February 2010. The album contained the two new songs from the previous tour, some songs written when it was "tra-la-la band", and some new compositions. The band began a tour of the UK and Europe in March 2010, beginning with a positively reviewed sold-out show in
Bristol. It performed at the
ATP I'll Be Your Mirror festival in October 2011 in
Asbury Park,
New Jersey. The setlist included a new composition, "What We Loved was Not Enough".
Fuck Off Get Free We Pour Light on Everything (2014 and hiatus) A new album,
Fuck Off Get Free We Pour Light on Everything, was released in January 2014. It was shorter than most of the previous ones and recorded at Valcourt Studio. In an interview with Vish Khanna on his Kreative Kontrol podcast, Menuck reported plans to release a Record Store Day 12" and an EP later in the year, both of which the band had just finished recording. In another interview, this time with the Paper Crane Podcast, member
Jessica Moss revealed that a reformation was set to take place in March of 2020 after the band's hiatus, but was offset due to the
COVID-19 pandemic. The future of the band is currently unknown. ==Style==