Grinderman Grinderman 2 [Anti-]
Need to know: Grinderman is essentially a more stripped, unhinged version of Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds. Formed by Cave, Warren Ellis, Martyn P. Casey and Jim Sclavunos as a way to unlock their more primal rock’n’roll urges and liberate themselves from the Bad Seeds canon. Aside from the looseness and no holds barred attitude of the music, it’s Cave’s decision to pick up the guitar that distinguished Grinderman from the Bad Seeds most. The band released their self-titled debut album in March 2007, but returned to the Bad Seeds the next year to record and release Dig, Lazurus, Dig!!!. Grinderman 2 was recorded in August 2009 with Nick Launay, who also produced the first album.
In a 100 words or so: Like the threatening wolf that graces the cover, Grinderman 2 is one snarling, temperamental beast. Like its predecessor, Cave’s unguarded prose reveals this sexual predator persona, waxing about mid-life neuroses and triple-x urges through biting one-liners. On the slithering, skronking “Worm Tamer,” Nick boasts that “My baby calls me the Loch Ness Monster/Two great big humps and then I’m gone,” while on the sludgy blues of “Kitchenette,” he tries to woo a housewife with the line “What’s this husband of yours ever given to you?/Oprah Winfrey on a plasma screen?” For all of his lyrical double entendres and free-flowing zingers though, Cave’s lyrics are only as dangerous as his band. But he’s got three depraved souls behind him, not to mention himself clawing away at the guitar, to make this some of the dirtiest, unbalanced music since Cave’s first band, the debaucherous Birthday Party. But just when you think you have them pegged, Grinderman throw in the surprisingly spiritual and sophisticated “Palaces of Montezuma,” a song that can save any soul, even these four brutes.
Best track: “Worm Tamer”
R.I.Y.L. Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds, The Birthday Party, The Stooges
Rating: 8.5/10
Buy, download, steal or don’t bother: Buy.
Sample: “Heathen Child”
Website: Grinderman.com
Tags: Grinderman, nick cave, Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds
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Electric Sunset Electric Sunset [K]
Need to know: Electric Sunset is Nic Zwart, previously of Olympia, Washington-based lo-fi act Desolation Wilderness. Over the course of two years, the band released a couple of albums before calling it quits earlier this year. Zwart moved on and brought his already established solo project to fruition. Moving back to San Francisco, he rejoined K for the release of his debut album.
In a 100 words or so: Zwart said he “wanted to create music that was both propulsive and dream-like.” In that sense he’s succeeded with this blissed out self-titled record. As a solo artist, he’s now free to explore his ambition, but truth be told, Electric Sunset doesn’t wander far off the course of what he was doing in Desolation Wilderness. Though he’s now devoid of two other musicians fleshing out his songs, the only real departure is in how he’s no longer part of a rock band that played “dream-like” music. On his own, his songs lack the structure his band provided, which actually works to his benefit, allowing a song like “Relay” to simply drift into a daze of delayed guitar chimes. But while Zwart can find the melodies, much like in Desolation Wilderness, he can’t seem to build much with them. A song like “Soda” made the rounds across music blogs, but despite its deliciously pulsating bass, shimmering guitar lines and stabbing beat combo, it fails to provide the memorable hooks of like-minded artists like Animal Collective or El Guincho. Sadly, this kind of missed potential comes all too often on Electric Sunset’s debut.
Best track: “Last Night On Earth”
R.I.Y.L. chillwave, Animal Collective, El Guincho, Atlas Sound, Panda Bear, Neon Indian
Rating: 6/10
Buy, download, steal or don’t bother: Download.
Sample: “Soda”
Website: MySpace.com/ElectricSunsetForever
Tags: Desolation Wilderness, Electric Sunset, Nick Zwart
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“NEU!? to me they sound like joy. like endless lines stretching on foreverinparallel.fragile.like a BRandNEWnew motorway and you are the first person to drive along it…” - Thom Yorke, Radiohead
Heavy praise from one of contemporary music’s most respected and innovative minds. But it’s fair to say that without Neu!, Radiohead could very well have remained the band that made Pablo Honey and not the band that made everything after it.
Like The Velvet Underground and The Stooges before them, krautrock legends Neu! were an underappreciated band of their time, and one that wouldn’t receive the reverence they deserved until arguably decades later.
Neu! was formed in 1971 by Michael Rother and Klaus Dinger, after they left their posts as guitarist and drummer, respectively, in Kraftwerk. Eschewing the mechanical arrangements of their previous band, the duo set out to make music that suggested constant motion through Dinger’s driving motorik rhythms and Rother’s sprawling, amorphous soundscapes.
It was during the recording of Neu!’s self-titled debut album that Dinger invented his
“Apache beat,” an ostinato rhythm that has been emulated by thousands of bands over the last 40 years. Despite the influence songs like “Hallogallo” and “Negativland” had, Neu! was considered a commercial disappointment by their label, Brain Records back in 1972. Neu! 2 followed the next year, featuring the band’s opus, the 11-minute“Für Immer.” But the album is remembered more for it’s flipside, which thanks to their label’s refusal to give them more money, inspired Rother and Dinger to remix their own songs – something dancehall emcees in Jamaica were really only doing.
Neu! 75, the third and final album of the band’s first run, saw a divide creeping into the songwriting. Considered a polarizing listen at the time by fans, the album is split into halves, demonstrating Rother’s inclination towards a sound more tranquil and atmospheric, while Dinger favoured a much more belligerent rock style that was borderline punk. Rother and Dinger called it quits shortly after the album’s release.
It would take ten years for the two to get back into a studio together. Over the course of seven months, Rother and Dinger worked on sessions but there was no official release until 1995, when the latter put out something called Neu! 4 in response to a number of bootlegs that had seen unauthorized releases. Rother refused its release and the album was pulled. When Astralwerks launched a reissue campaign of the Neu! albums in 2001, the duo agreed not to include this album.
The influence on modern day music cannot be stressed enough. Aside from the number of krautrock inspired bands jamming it out today, Neu! has played a vital role in the music of David Bowie, Radiohead, Stereolab, Julian Cope, Wilco, Autechre, Broadcast, New Order, OMD, Deerhunter and Tortoise. And just last year, Primal Scream, Sonic Youth, LCD Soundsystem, Oasis and Holy Fuck, among others, contributed songs to a tribute album called Brand Neu!.
Just recently, Michael Rother revived Neu!’s music (Klaus Dinger passed away in 2008), launching a new live act called Hallogallo 2010 with the help of Sonic Youth’s Steve Shelley and Tall Firs’ Aaron Mullan. Rother also took on a massive undertaking by compiling and issuing the official, definitive and awesome Neu! vinyl box set. Included in the collection are the first three Neu! albums, but also Neu! ’86, a reworked version of the fourth album, as well as Neu! ‘72, a previously unreleased 18-minute live maxi-single. On top of that comes digital downloads of all the recordings, a 36-page picture book that features snaps of the band by Anton Corbijn, an official Neu! stencil (yes, it’s as awesome as it sounds) and a bright orange Neu! T-shirt.
You can buy the Neu! vinyl box set at the band’s official store, and trust me, it’s worth every penny no matter what you pay.
Check out a great interview with Michael Rother here.
Tags: Klaus Dinger, Michael Rother, Neu!, Radiohead, Thom Yorke
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The Thermals Personal Life [Kill Rock Stars]
Need to know: From Portland, Oregon, The Thermals began as an evolution of folk duo of Hutch & Kathy, whose Hutch Harris and Kathy Foster would go on to become the backbone and only remaining members of the band. Signing to Sub Pop in 2002, the band released their debut album, More Parts Per Million, the next year with Jordan Hudson on drums and Ben Barnett on guitar. Hutch took over on guitar after Barnett left and The Thermals downsized to a trio for the second album, Fuckin’ A, which was produced by Death Cab For Cutie’s Chris Walla and released the next year. Inspired by the Bush administration, the third album, 2006’s The Body, The Blood, The Machine was a concept album produced by Fugazi’s Brendan Canty that “tells the story of a young couple who must flee a United States governed by fascist faux-Christians.” Hudson left his post as drummer during the album’s recording sessions, which were completed by Foster. For their fourth album, Now We Can See, the band left Sub Pop and signed with Kill Rock Stars. Once again Foster filled in on drums, but added Westin Glass once the album was finished. Chris Walla returned to record the fifth Thermals album, Personal Life, which is described by the label as an entire LP “about the concept of a connection between two people - making it, breaking it, and faking it.”
In a 100 words or so: If consistency was rewarded in music, The Thermals would have received many gold stars and/or blue ribbons for their first four albums. Their punchy, distorted arrangements and Hutch’s knack for turning vitriolic rants into spit-covered anthems have made them an anomaly in an industry that rarely sees a band put out two great albums, let alone four. Personal Life mostly puts their political and religious hang-ups on hold to focus on music’s most generous subject: love. Book ended by “I’m Gonna Change Your Life” and “You Changed My Life,” the album unfolds like any relationship, going through ups and downs to reveal a tumultuous experience. Albums about “love, loss and… lies!” (as the press release states) have been done to death, but there’s something about the band’s scrappy sound that gives such clichéd subject matter an air of novelty almost. As with any Thermals album, you can always expect at least one track to be a fist-pumping, rush of adrenaline (see “No Culture Icons,” “Our Trip,” “A Pillar of Salt” and “I Let It Go”), which “I Don’t Believe You,” one of the band’s finest moments delivers in full. While their sound will never progress beyond three chords (here’s to hoping), the concepts keep coming and Personal Life is the band’s most relatable effort yet, not to mention deserving of another one of those gold stars, or blue ribbons, whichever.
Best track: “I Don’t Believe You”
R.I.Y.L. Superchunk, The Hold Steady, Ted Leo + The Pharmacists, Titus Andronicus, Les Savy Fav, Japandroids, The Weakerthans
Rating: 7/10
Buy, download, steal or don’t bother: Buy.
Sample: “I Don’t Believe You”
Website: TheThermals.com
Tags: Kill Rock Stars, Personal Life, The Thermals
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We’re officially a week away until Interpol release their self-titled fourth album, which finds the suave New Yorkers back on their original “indie” label of Matador Records after a brief fling with “major” EMI. Will it be a return to the brooding brilliance of their first two albums? According to the label Interpol is “hypnotic, bizarre, always indelible” and also “the band’s magnum opus.” I guess we’ll see if that’s true on September 7th.
While you wait, check out this short chat we did with Interpol’s Daniel Kessler (above, left) while he was in Toronto recently during a promotional stop. The dapper guitarist reveals to us what is currently getting regular plays on his iPod as well as what lucky band they’ll be taking on the road with them. (more…)
Tags: Avi Buffalo, Beach House, Daniel Kessler, Interpol, Twin Tigers
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Ra Ra Riot The Orchard [Arts & Crafts]
Need to know: Ra Ra Riot were born in 2006 and came storming out of the gates like a Kentucky Derby winner. Known for their spirited live shows, the band became a blog darling after a series of triumphant gigs during the 2007 South By Southwest Conference. However, shortly after, the band lost their drummer John Pike, who drowned to his death in Buzzards Bay, Massachusetts in June. Ra Ra Riot carried on with Cameron Wisch as their new drummer though, releasing their debut EP the next month and eventually signing to prestigious indie label Barsuk for their first album. The Rhumb Line was released to generally positive reviews in 2008, and they toured extensively with Tokyo Police Club that year. Two more EPs followed. The band self-produced their second album, The Orchard, choosing labelmate Chris Walla of Death Cab For Cutie and Rostam Batmanglij of Vampire Weekend to help mix.
In a 100 words or so: Ra Ra Riot’s second album isn’t much of a departure from The Rhumb Line. But where that album failed to live up to the promise they exhibited with their 2007 self-titled EP, The Orchard finally delivers. The title track isn’t the best example of this; overtly theatrical, it’s carried by a sweeping string section, a bass line and Wes Miles’ poignant words. It comes off as a little too intense for an album opener, yet adds to the band’s sprawling palette of wonderfully arranged indie pop. The abruptness of segueing into a peppy number like “Boy” feels like a bit of a misstep, but that song’s vibrancy acts like some kind of memory eraser, especially once the restless rhythm kicks into the subsequent track, “Too Dramatic.” Ra Ra Riot’s strength is in just how diversified and open their orch pop is. All too often the strings are the driving force behind a band that sports a violinist, but they integrate influences such as blatant ‘80s keyboard tones (“Foolish”) and the type of Afro-pop rhythms and geographical referencing we’ve come to know from Vampire Weekend (“Massachusetts”). Proving the early hype wasn’t a fluke, The Orchard is the kind of well-rounded, syrupy record we’ve come to hope for from the indie pop set.
Best track: “Shadowcasting”
R.I.Y.L. Vampire Weekend, Local Natives, The Morning Benders, Miniature Tigers, Fanfarlo, Stars
Rating: 7/10
Buy, download, steal or don’t bother: Download on iTunes.
Sample: “Boy”
Website: RaRaRiot.com
Tags: Ra Ra Riot
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You may recognize the face above or even the name Baby Eagle if you’re familiar with Canada’s (former?) hardest working band, the Constantines. Steve Lambke has been a familiar presence in our country’s indie rock circuit for an official decade now, mostly because of his tenure as guitarist/vocalist/songwriter in the Cons. But for the last half-decade, Lambke has been occupying his free time as a rustic troubadour under the moniker Baby Eagle.
After two well-received releases through Outside Records - 2006’s Baby Eagle and 2007’s No Blues, Lambke brought his third and latest Baby Eagle effort to his own label, You’ve Changed Records, which he co-founded with Daniel Romano and Ian Kehoe of Attack in Black. Like with his previous albums, Dog Weather finds Lambke reaching out to some friends (Romano, as well as Shotgun Jimmie, and David Trenaman and Colleen Collins of Construction & Destruction) to help flesh out his songs, this time recording in a lakeside house in the middle of nowhere.
With Dog Weather, Lambke’s songwriting has undergone some changes as a result of both the persons involved and the rustic environment. There’s an undeniable shift from the downtrodden melancholy of albums one and two to a much sunnier demeanour, as well as a boost in the amplification, as Lambke and co have channeled Crazy Horse by plugging in and treading all over their Big Muff pedals.
Celebrating this week’s release of Dog Weather and prepping for an extensive cross-Ontario tour in September, Steve answered some questions about the new album as well as the future of the Constantines.
For each album you’ve gathered together different musicians to help you out. How did you end up assembling the band that made Dog Weather?
Shotgun Jimmie played on the last one and we’d been playing shows together in Sackville since I moved here, Jimmie on drums and me on electric guitar. Dan and I had played together a bit when we both happened to be living in Montreal, before I moved out east and he moved back to Ontario, and we had recorded the Baby Eagle/Attack in Black split together. I wanted somebody to play lead and Dan’s a great guitar player. David and Colleen of Construction and Destruction, we were recording at their house and I’m a fan of their records. Dave ended up playing most of the bass and Colleen added some little bits to a couple of tunes.
How has living in Sackville changed you as a songwriter? It must change the perspective you had when you were based in Guelph or Toronto.
Yeah, every place can inspire different things, local languages, landmarks, and new experiences. Some of the record was written when I was living in Montreal, and some of the particulars of life there are written into the songs, simple things like going down to the corner store to buy beer or wine, and not, you know, to the provincial run alcohol depot. Or, in Sackville, mention of the tides, muddy yards, old barns. But those are sometimes just the surface images and not necessarily what I think the songs are actually about.
The album was recorded in a rural house near a lake. Four friends out in the middle of nowhere. Any stories to tell?
We recorded it so fast! We were only there three days. Jimmie was leaving for a couple months on tour, Dan was leaving for an Attack in Black tour. We did it in the little bit of time we had, the guys learning the songs on the spot, figuring out arrangements really quick, recording everything live off the floor. We recorded at Construction and Destruction’s home studio, the Quarantine, in Port Greville, Nova Scotia on the Minas Basin of the Bay of Fundy. It was cold in the house. There were wood fires in the stoves and we were wearing lots of sweaters. Jimmie invented a colour: “Chaldren” - the happy black.
Was it this group of musicians that made you want to turn the guitars and fuzz up?
I’d definitely been heading in this direction, and a louder sound was definitely meant to be part of these new songs. But the record sounds the way it does because of the musicians that played on it. Even though we’d never all played together before it felt like a band and i think we played like a band.
You sound a bit happier on Dog Weather than on previous albums. Was that a reflection of anything in particular?
I don’t really know how to respond. The last record was really internal, and this record is definitely more concerned with the external, physical world. There’s definitely joy in that.
You released the album on You’ve Changed Records, the label you started with Daniel and Ian of Attack in Black. What are some of the pros and cons working for yourself?
I’m excited about it because we are doing it together, playing on each other’s records, helping promote each other, figuring out the business for ourselves, building relationships. The downside I guess would be the lack of outside resources to draw on, but i like the idea of making art within the means available, so I try not to think of that as a negative.
Finally, there are rumours circulating about the Constantines going on hiatus or even breaking up. What is the current status of the band? Do you personally think there will be another Constantines record?
A definite hiatus of indefinite length. Sounds like a break up. I really have no idea if there will be another record.
Catch Baby Eagle at one of the dates below throughout September and October…
Wed, Sept 22nd – Waterloo, ON - Jane Bond
Thurs, Sept 23rd – Toronto, ON - The Dakota Tavern
Fri, Sept 24th – Sudbury, ON - Millard’s Garage (all-ages)
Fri, Sept 24th – Sudbury, ON - Townhouse Tavern
Sat, Sept 25th – Kingston, ON - The Artel
Sun, Sept 26th - Oshawa, ON - Murphey’s Irish Pub
Mon, Sept 27th – Peterborough, ON - The Spill
Tues, Sept 28th – St. Catherines, ON - The Mansion House
Wed, Sept 29th – Guelph, ON - The Ebar
Thurs, Sept 30th – Montreal, QC - Le Cagibi (Sappyfest showcase at Pop Montreal)
Fri, Oct 1st - Ottawa, ON - Raw Sugar
Sat, Oct 2nd – Hamilton, ON - The Ship
Sun, Oct 3rd – Bayfield, ON - Black Dog
Tags: Baby Eagle, Constantines, Steve Lambke
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Grass Widow Past Time [Kill Rock Stars]
Need to know: The name Grass Widow is a reference to a woman whose husband is away at sea (it’s from the 17th century, of course). One bar of music though and it’s quite clear that this San Francisco trio have clearly been influenced by late ‘70s post-punk acts like Delta 5 and Kleenex, the early ‘90s Riot Grrl movement and the various artists that have come and gone on their new label, Kill Rock Stars. (They also cite ‘60s bands like The Kinks and The Move as inspiration.) Formed in 2007, Hannah Lew (bassist/vocalist), Lillian Maring (drummer/vocalist) and Raven Mahon (guitarist/vocalist) wasted little time writing their “very personal and often dark” songs, releasing both a full-length on Make A Mess Records and a four-song 12” on Captured Tracks last year. What’s perhaps most cool about Grass Widow is how the band is all about equality, putting no particular focus on any member or instrument, sharing songwriting and singing duties between the three of them. Says the band: “We want to thrive in our scene as musicians, with a focus on our musicianship first, not our gender. Our goal is to normalize the role of gender in our craft and have an avenue to express our intelligence and our love of music. We acknowledge that movements of the past created by or affecting women in the art and music worlds are hugely influential, but there is potential for the original sentiments to lose potency if the meaning is misinterpreted or not redesigned for a modern context. Even the riot grrl movement is kind of antiquated. You never really hear people talk about that ‘new riot grrl’ band. We owe a great deal to that lineage but it’s time for something new. We want to be portrayed as the responsible, thoughtful people that we are.”
In a 100 words or so: Past Time is a marked improvement from Grass Widow’s flawed yet charming debut album. While there isn’t much of a shift in sound – it’s still rickety, melodic post-post-punk – there’s a certain confidence that now rings from the songs. Credit the upgrade to a label as perfectly suited for them as Kill Rock Stars as playing some role in this, whether it was conscious or not. The band’s minimal, “no frills” approach now brings out their three-part harmonies and frenetic instrumentation, both of which have developed greatly, especially on a song like “Submarine.” While they might not have the buzz behind them like Vivian Girls did, Grass Widow can challenge any of their contemporaries and even ancestors to a songwriting competition – and win.
Best track: “Landscape”
R.I.Y.L. Kleenex, Erase Errata, Sleater-Kinney, The Raincoats, Slant 6, Vivian Girls
Rating: 7.5/10
Buy, download, steal or don’t bother: This sounds best on vinyl, but check it out first here.
Sample: “Fried Egg”
Website: MySpace.com/GrassWidowMusic
Tags: Grass Widow
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!!! Strange Weather, Isn’t It? [Warp]
Need to know: Sacramento’s !!! (pronounced “chk chk chk” or any three sounds repeated in a row) emerged from the post-punk scene that broke in the early ‘00s. While most of those bands were known for their angular guitars and disco drums, !!! were renowned for their emphatic rhythms that were more funk-based than punk-based. A self-titled album in 2000 was greatly overlooked, but the band struck gold in 2003 with the politically-minded epic single “Me and Giuliani Down By the School Yard.” A second album, the awesome Louden Up Now, followed the next year and in 2006 they were the support act for the Red Hot Chili Peppers’ UK tour. In 2007, !!! released their third album, Myth Takes, which scored the band spots on video games like FIFA 08 and Grand Theft Auto IV. Singer Nic Offer and guitarist Tyler Pope used to moonlight in the equally rad but no longer active Out Hud. Pope is also a member of the live version of LCD Soundsystem.
In a 100 words or so: Recorded in Berlin, unfortunately Strange Weather, Isn’t It? doesn’t exactly break new ground for !!!. That may never have been the plan for recording their fourth album in a new environment, but it feels as though they have once again failed to make that leap from writing eternal punk-funk jams to actual songs. Die-hards may appreciate their dedication to the groove, but the verse-chorus-verse structure could do wonders for a band with this kind of throbbing dynamic. They experiment with this notion on “Even Judas Gave Jesus A Kiss,” but in the end that song eventually morphs into the same tune we’ve heard again and again. Strange Weather, Isn’t It? sounds like !!! are just going through the motions at this point instead of exploring a sound that is open to all kinds of interpretation.
Best track: “The Hammer”
R.I.Y.L. Out Hud, LCD Soundsystem, Public Image Ltd., The Rapture, Liquid Liquid, Soulwax
Rating: 6/10
Buy, download, steal or don’t bother: Download “The Hammer” and “AM/FM.” Stream the album here and decide for yourself about the rest.
Sample: “AM/FM”
Website: ChkChkChk.net
Tags: !!!, chk chk chk
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Lost In The Trees All Alone In An Empty House [Anti-]
Need to know: Lost In The Trees began with the songs of one North Carolinian named Ari Picker. Like most singer-songwriters, Ari favours the acoustic guitar but thankfully doesn’t rely on the down-and-out busker image, fleshing out his songs not only with a proper full band, but also a classical slant. With a sound self-described as “orchestral folk,” Lost In The Trees are as serious about the strings as they are the acoustic guitar, thanks to Picker’s studies on classical music at the Berklee College of Music. Astonishingly, the band call Chapel Hill their home, yet aren’t part of the local Merge Records roster; instead they signed with Anti- Records. All Alone In An Empty House, the band’s debut album, is heavily inspired by Picker’s troubled childhood. In his words: “The song‘s locations and happenings, my father‘s stone wall, the tower off the side of the house that he eventually moved into, my twin sisters who died at birth, my mother’s extreme depression, the emotional and sexual abuses, they are all real. But my intention in sharing them is to turn this hard reality into art, something that the listener may find comfort or hope in.”
In a 100 words or so: Excuse the pun, but it’s impossible not to get lost in All Alone In An Empty House. As eye-rolling as that sounds, it’s true. Whether it’s Picker’s deeply personal and tragic anecdotes or the incredibly poignant arrangements, this is an album that calls for an environment of solitude, headphones and a rain-splattered window to truly immerse yourself in the music. The classical component is more than just strings as an accent in the background. Picker and his band may have composed these songs on guitar, but they’re as much the product of a conductor and an orchestra (see the two instrumental Mvt. Sketches, which sound straight out of the Naxos catalogue). To steal a title from Dave Eggers, this is a heartbreaking work of staggering genius.
Best track: “Wooden Walls Of This Forest Church”
R.I.Y.L. Bright Eyes, The Swell Season, Timber Timbre, Ray LaMontagne, Bon Iver
Rating: 8.5/10
Buy, download, steal or don’t bother: Buy.
Sample: “Walk Around The Lake” http://www.anti.com/media/stream/811
Website: LostInTheTrees.com
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