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Showing posts with label shoegaze. Show all posts
Showing posts with label shoegaze. Show all posts

Jun 19, 2013

TRVE WIDOW (2008)


Earnest slowdoom or doomgaze or slownergaze(?) which verges on, whether accidentally or not, alt metal (gasp) and grunge too (along with the shoegaze), and so it shoots for Kyuss but connects at Alice in Chains instead, and because of this its soaring Slowdive aspirations feel like they're being viewed from the Deftones desert camp, Thursday morning, 2:30am. As a consequence, the slowcore leftovers appear like I Guess I Would era Acetone drove out to join them for a feel-bad stargaze session- no campfires, cellphones, or snacks allowed.
True Widow is that feel-bad desert stargaze session. Everyone's invited but what's encouraged is a few minutes of passive or vicarious participation in the vague yet (within the camp) generally well agreed upon view that all things are heavy for reasons unknown and perhaps even unknowable. Our investment in it can actually be pleasantly sincere if we can believe that the others are either a) enjoying themselves right here and now in spite of their initial reason for meeting, or b) would rather be anywhere else, rather than say just glorifying the absence we all know is there and wish to fill with something we can't seem to find and don't think we ever will. A lesser record would do just that.

try

Jan 21, 2013

Piano Magic - Low Birth Weight (1999)


Not just an impressive link between the lush-moody gothiness of the 80s and sharp-moody altiness of the 90s, Low Birth Weight frequently brings to mind both The xx's feely minimalism and Michael Cashmore's chilling pastoral fragility as Nature and Organisation. The title makes me think of sick babies, and the cover creeps me out and makes me happy all at once.

B-



stream / -

Nov 21, 2012

Band of Susans - The Word and the Flesh (1991)


The kind of shoegaze which retains a punk rock-ish level of angularity in spite of the haze, and, interestingly, Shields' groundbreaking movement into complete abstraction the same year and within the same vague field (shoegazing?), what to do but make a superficial link to Rhys Chatham, they cover him on the last track, and to New York City rather than Dublin, noise rockers rather than feely abstractioners, Sonic Youth rather than Slowdive, thought rather than pure feeling, and so on, or whatever, a rare case of that trite yet inevitable comparison actually bringing out the record's best features

A-

here
non-ghetto fidelity version 1 / 2

Jul 4, 2012

Wammo (1995)


Often criticized for its lack of raw edginess given the band's origins, Wammo has Bailter Space opening up their sound and emphasizing melody more than ever. I think I'm in the minority that thinks that by this stage, they might as well have written 10 pop songs instead of every now and then trying to remind us of their roots such as in We Drive At Five. When they're not wanting to split the listener's head open, they're writing songs like Splat which are incredible. The angularity of the guitars recall Shellac, again reminding of Gordons' immense influence, while the little moments where a sweet melody is cut short and the distortion is left to ring out recall Justin Broadrick's work in Godflesh's underrated Hymns. Mostly though, Wammo is spacier, leading to Failure comparisons. The scope of Failure by way of Shellac and Godflesh? Yeah, in places it's that good! Again, I feel let down whenever the band return to their Sonic Youth, or worse, post-punk/industrial influences, like why'd you do that to Zapped?!, but those moments are fewer than I'm making out. Check D Thing for a Neu!-ish driving rhythm with noise pop over the top, and Splat 'cause that song is SO GOOD. Critics noting the half-pop sound here give it something like a 3/5 'cause there's still the Skeptics/Fugazi/Sonic Youth pretensions underneath it all. I'll do sorta the same, but the opposite, like get that shit out of my Shellac pop!

B-

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Jun 27, 2012

Rocketship - A Certain Smile, A Certain Sadness (1996)


On A Certain Smile, A Certain Sadness, Rocketship attempt to take on the familiar narrative of love and regret similar to Girls’ Album, Tom Waits’ Martha, and Fennesz’s Endless Summer.

Like Girls’ debut, Rocketship draw on various styles to capture the feeling of heartbreak, and suitably Elvis Costello-ish moments occur in both: Girls’ aping of Costello’s modernization of Buddy Holly and The Beach Boys, and Rocketship’s use of jarring organs and na-na-na choruses. The difference is that between sentimental vintage pop workouts, Girls wrote epics about refusing to give up, acknowledging the need to move on with life. Rocketship, however, never acknowledge the present. The naivete of their twee language comes with the naive hope to return to the past. Waits’ Martha captured the spirit of regret and life-denying nostalgia as the narrator is melancholy in the verses but happy in the choruses where he recalls the past. Unlike Girls, Waits sees no point in allowing his narrator to move on- he’ll presumably be stuck longing for the past as the present continues to slip into the past- it’s already been “forty years or more,” Martha’s married and Frost’s only getting older. This sad state is acknowledged by Fennesz in his masterpiece A Year in a Minute. The promise of an “endless summer” is ostensibly challenged by the song as things become not only temporal, but uncontrollably rapid. Fennesz’s album has been described as a sort of futuristic nostalgia- his “endless summer” is a vacuum one can return to at any time, but as he warns, years will go by in a minute. Underneath the joy is a sick decay. Rocketship say the same: their songs appear like an endless summer being remembered by no one in particular- it could be an elderly Tom Frost or a family on a distant planet (as with Fennesz). However, whereas Fennesz re-arranged and disemboweled old records to show how the present manipulates memories, Rocketship still don’t acknowledge any present. Their trick is to have the listener reminisce so that years can go by in a minute. Fennesz’s aesthetic reminds the listener of the nature of that endless summer, Rocketship seemingly, cynically wish to entrap the listener in it. At least, I felt that way until the album’s title clicked for me. The band promise that “certain smile,” but warn that it comes with “a certain sadness.” It smiles, as Waits does, but only when it’s caught remembering something- everything else is regret and decay.

It’s an enjoyable record, just watch out for when it promises transcendence in its Loop-like moments, sweet memories in its Elvis Costello and Sweet Trip ones, and introspection when it goes Loveless-ish abstraction. It offers something happy, but the warning’s in the title.

A+

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May 22, 2012

Black Tambourine - Black Tambourine (2010)


Best-of collection- important indie pop/noise band played super sweet pop songs for pashing and falling in love (The Vaselines), said songs were also amateurish and scuzzy as fuck (The Jesus and Mary Chain) 'cause, ya know, it's gotta be early 90s sounding

And isn't it all so great!

I love this band

A

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May 19, 2012

Henry's Dress - Henry's Dress (1995)


1. Definitely Nothing 2:02
2. Title Forthcoming 3:00
3. Sally Wants 2:16
4. (You're My) Radio One 2:33
5. "A" is for Cribbage 2:00
6. Three 4:51
7. Feathers 2:45
8. You Killed a Boy for Me 1:24


B

Apr 14, 2012

Suis La Lune - Heir

1. With Wings of Feathers and Glue
2. September Gave Us Awkwardness, October Gave Us Nothing
3. The Greatest Actors Keep on Acting Offstage
4. Can't Believe I Spelled it Out to You

Suis La Lune is an emo band from Sweden. Their sound is hard to describe, encompassing shoegaze and slowcore influences in melodic passages (that kind of sound like Sunny Day Real Estate?) contrasted with chaotic, yet melodic screamo parts. Probably the 'prettiest' sounding band of this genre... and that's saying something. One of my favourite releases.


Apr 8, 2012

Widowspeak - Widowspeak

1. Puritan
2. Harsh Realm
3. Night Crawlers
4. In the Pines
5. Limbs
6. Gun Shy
7. Hard Times
8. Fir Coat
9. Half Awake
10. Ghost Boy
11. Brain Freeze (Bonus)
12. Burn Out (Bonus)

Widowspeak is a dream pop/indie trio from Brooklyn. Their sound consists of simple, pretty melodies that are brought to life by mellow female vocals - which draws similarity to Mazzy Star. One of my favourite albums from last year that I keep coming back to.

Porcelain Raft - Strange Weekend (2012)


1. Drifting in and Out
2. Shapeless & Gone
3. Is It Too Deep for You?
4. Put Me to Sleep
5. Backwords
6. Unless You Speak From Your Heart
7. The End of Silence
8. If You Have a Wish
9. Picture
10. The Way In

Crazy sweet dream pop blended with 90s British indie and late 60s British folk

B