Irish producer and DJ Mano Le Tough releases a new single, âAye Aye Mi Mi,â from his forthcoming album, At The Moment, out August 20th on DJ Kozeâs Pampa Record, and announces new tour dates with more to come. Following lead single âNo Road Without A Turn,â âAye Aye Mi Miâ is an indie dance ear-worm thatâs hard to shake, and is the only track on the record that survived his original batch of demos and sketches. Beat and bass heavy, it highlights Manoâs skills for melodies and compelling vocal inflections. Mesmerizing instrumental flourishes, like ascending keys, filter in and out. âItâs a kind of reflection on narcissism, social media saturation and the ego,â Mano says.
After more than a decade of releases and touring, Mano has spent the past year at home in Zurich, rearing his young family and focusing on the positives of 14 months without performing, amid the uncertainty of the pandemic. In the face of horror, Mano channelled inspiration. With At The Moment, the follow-up to 2015âs Trails, those struggles have produced a record which balances the ambivalence of the current moment, with wistful streaks of unguarded optimism.
At The Moment shows Manoâs modes of expression evolving too. The synths and rhythms common to earlier works are now complemented with less familiar sounds and influences. Jangling guitars and sun-bleached chords envelop his own tender, plaintive vocals in a dappled wash of summery pop. Another track grounds overlapping melodies and sci-fi soundtrack pads with hip hop beats, creating a hypnotic slice of slinky retro-futurism. Where there is reflection, there is also a sense of being unafraid. Listen to Mano Le Toughâs âAye Aye Mi Miâ
Fri. July 23 – Las Vegas, NV @ Art of the Wild Sat. July 24 – New York, NY @ Teksupport Sun. July 25 – Miami, FL @ Space Thu July 29 – Athens, FR @ Island Sun. Aug. 15 –Â Bloemendaal, NL @ Woodstock Sun. Aug. 16 – Berlin, DE @ TBD Mon. Aug. 17 – Verbier, CH @ Electroclette Fri. Aug. 27 – Lincolnshire, UK @ Lost Village
Legendary South Sudanese pop star Gordon Koang announces his Coronavirus / Disco 12â, out August 4th via Music in Exile. This double-A-side release shares Gordonâs messages of peace, love and positivity, and is his first offering since 2020âs âidiosyncratically joyousâ (Bandcamp) Unity. âCoronavirusâ was penned by Koang in July 2020 as a response to his personal experiences of the global pandemic. As his hometown of Melbourne went into lockdown, Gordon resided in the cityâs outer suburbs with his cousin, Paul Biel, and his four-stringed, guitar-like instrument, the thom. Throughout this single, Gordon offers his condolences to those affected by the pandemic, alongside messages of his faith in frontline workers and the hope that circumstances will improve soon. âPeople suffer a lot. I ask that God gives the doctors the big wisdom to defeat the coronavirus. When people hear my song, I hope that this music counsels them. The song has a lot of meaning, it is telling them to be hopeful.â
With the cancellation of a national tour and numerous festival appearances, Covid-19 had not only impacted Gordonâs career here in Australia, but also his opportunity to visit family he hadnât seen in five years. After receiving Australian permanent residency, Gordon and Paul were now able to visit family in Uganda, however this was made incredibly difficult due to border closures and the potential health risks. Taking a last minute opportunity, Gordon and Paul travelled to Africa and whilst excited to visit their families, they also experienced the impact of the pandemic on their home communities. âIn Africa, it is not like us here, there is no medicine and in Africa there is also no Centrelink if you are in lockdown. It is difficult getting services. Even getting food is difficult.â
After two weeks in hotel quarantine, Gordon and Paul returned to Melbourne, eager to record music once more. With lockdown lifting, Gordon headed to the studio with a new band featuring Zak Olsen (ORB, Traffik Island) Jack Kong (Baked Beans, Traffik Island), David âDaffâ Gravolin (ORB), and Jesse Williams (Leah Senior, Girlatones). This new release is the result of these studio sessions, jamming and recording at Button Pusher in Preston, Melbourne.
The Coronavirus / Disco 12â will feature a pull-out poster from Gordon, encouraging listeners to stay positive during this difficult time:
âMy condolences to you, my audience in lockdown. We are all suffering from coronavirus. Let us stand firm and be strong. Let us look after each other, until the time comes when God brings us together. I give my condolences to people who have died of coronavirus, in aged care and disability. We are heartbroken for everyone. Let us take it easy, and pray in our houses, all around the world. If you believe in God, pray to the God you believe in, and they will help you. God will give us the chance to go back to normal and open all events. Even if it is a bad time now, there will be a change and it will be a good time for us. Thank you to everyone.â – Gordon Koang
Coming in with a new lineup (Oliver Ackermann– guitar and lead vocals, John Fedowitz – bass, Sandra Fedowitz – drums), a new label (Dedstrange), and a return to their early shoegaze roots, A Place to Bury Strangers‘ new EP, Hologram, is filled to the brim with pent-up energy created from a year of being stuck in the house and watching most of the world go at each other’s throats instead of coming together in a time of crisis.
The opening processed and live beats of “End of the Night” are perfect for your morning walk with the dog or your bad-ass strut into a dark club where you’re going to perform a hit. John Fedowitz’s bass line ignites the spark of Ackermann’s gasoline guitar while he sings about the end of friendships in his old band (“Now that the friendship’s gone, I miss it to pieces.”), taking a breath, and moving forward with his new one. The My Bloody Valentineinfluence on APTBS is undeniable on the track, as it almost sounds like it was left out in the sun to warp.
“I Might Have” has a cool 1960s garage rock feel to it, if that garage is on fire and located next to a busy railroad line while Ackermann’s voice echoes almost to the edge of incomprehension. “Playing the Part” reminds me of some early Cure cuts while Ackermann sings about life continuing after bad times have come and gone (“Who doesn’t enjoy the sun?”).
“In My Hive” could well be the theme for everyone who made it through 2020. We were all stuck in our own hives, sometimes busy as bees working to make any sense of the world and restructuring our lives. Ackermann was not only restructuring his life, but also his band / livelihood, and launch a record label. The track has a great driving, industrial beat throughout it, leaving one to wonder if Sandra Fedowitz is a cyborg. John Fedowitz’s bass is subtly in the lead of “I Need You,” with Ackermann singing a lovely shoegaze tale of loss that wouldn’t be out of place on a Slowdive album.
This new direction for APTBS is an intriguing one. The band is exploring loss and also embracing new avenues and possibilities. Ackermann and John Fedowitz, longtime friends, were formerly in the underground shoegaze band Skywave and have now come back together for a new venture. Only APTBS know where this will take them. We’re just holding on so we don’t fly off their sonic bullet train.
Keep your mind open.
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[Thanks to Dedstrange and to Patrick at Pitch Perfect PR.]
Anika – the project of Berlin-based musician Annika Henderson – shares the new single/video, âRights,â from Change, her first new album in over a decade, out July 23rd on Sacred Bones and Invada. Following âChangeâ and âFinger Pies,â âRightsâ drones with Anikaâs beautifully plaintive voice and oscillating percussion. In her words, the song is about âturning the tables, giving power to those who normally feel disempowered. This song is about unification not division. This song is about female (/queer/non-binary/marginalised communities) empowerment – the joining of forces, not pitted against each other. This song is about wanting to escape reality but then we can never truly escape it, it will always be there to collect its dues. We can only ever achieve temporary escape. The better option is to bring whatever we want into reality.â During the songâs peak, Anika chants encouragingly: âFeel the power // feel the power // show me power.â
The accompanying video, directed by Anika and Sabrina Labis, features Anika and Mueran Humanosâs Carmen Burguess. The video toggles between the virtual and real worlds, playing with the ideas of dreams and displacement, and seeking places of empowerment. Anika elaborates: âAt the end of the video, the memory of the feelings, the knowledge that it was possible, remained, that is enough to start bringing it into our own life. We all have rights.â Co-director Sabrina Labis adds: âMaking videos is my way to feel power. The power of changing perspectives, escaping conservative structures and landing on a very close and free power-planet where everything is possible. Press play, take off and enjoy.â
2021 is shaping up to be the year of Alan Vega. Every year should be but, this year is definitely it. The announcement of the opening of the Alan Vega archives, which will be unleashing an untold amount of unreleased material dating back to 1971 via Sacred Bones, the release of Mutator (a lost album from the mid 90âs) which has gained rave reviews, a massive feature in the New York TimesâŠAlan has been celebrated everywhere of late. In The Red is over the moon to participate in this celebration with the release of Alan Vega After Dark – an album that captures a late night rock nâ roll session with Alan backed by Ben Vaughn, Barb Dwyer and Palmyra Delran (all members of the incredible Pink Slip Daddy as well as countless other cool projects). This album serves as a reminder that Alan Vega was an incredible rock nâ roll/blues/rockabilly vocalist. He was one of the best.Â
From the desk of Jason P. Woodbury: I only spoke with Alan Vega once. It was over the phone and the topic of discussion was the 2015 reissue of Cubist Blues, the phenomenally out there album heâd originally released with collaborators Alex Chilton and Ben Vaughn in 1996. I was in a noisy stadium for reasons that no longer matter at all, on a cell phone, but even with all that extra noise considered, Alan was exceptionally difficult to understand. At first at least. Heâd suffered a stroke a few years earlier, in 2012, which still had lingering effects on his speech. But even before that, his heavy East Coast accent had sometimes made him hard to decipher, lending his voice the character of âa cab driver describing fine art,â Vaughn says. If you werenât from New Yorkâspecifically Alanâs New York, an older version of Gotham that may have died with him on July 16th, 2016, when he passed on his sleepâit could be hard to keep up. But after a few minutes, I adjusted to the rhythm. Suddenly, without warning, I found myself able to dance to the peculiar beat of Vegaâs jutting back and forth, his Jewish mystic cadence, the kind you hear in gasps and yelps on the transgressively savagely conceptual records he made in the late â70s with Martin Rev as Suicide, or the solo records he made starting in the 80s and continuing through to his final studio album “IT” finished in early 2015 and released posthumously in 2017, collages of machoismo-powered rockabilly, space cadet hard rock, renegade cowboy soul, and neon-drenched pop art Americana. You acclimate and then boom: Youâre immersed in the âone-man subculture,â to borrow Vaughnâs description, of Alan Vega. Â
Though his relationship to the mainstream was flirtatious but never a fully committed one, Vegaâs sub rosa influence on a disparate but extensive list of punks, new wavers, industrial deconstructionists, garage rockers, and pop stars is clear. His admirers included Ric Ocasek of the Cars, a frequent collaborator, and Bruce Springsteen, whose 1982 album Nebraska, particularly the creeping song âState Trooper,â explored the same haunted backroads Vega sang about. âThe bravery and passion he showed throughout his career was deeply influential to me,â Springsteen noted on his Facebook page, memorializing Vega. âThere was simply no one else remotely like him.â Â
No one else like him. That was certainly the case in 2015, when Vega decamped to Renegade Studio in New York Cityâs West Village with Vaughn on guitar, bassist and keyboardist Barb Dwyer, drummer (and Sirius XM DJ) Palmyra Delran, and engineer Geoff Sanoff. Sporting sunglasses, a knit cap and long rider coat, Vega looked tough as nails in his 78th year, and as always he was dedicated to the moment, to capturing the ghosts for what would prove to be his final live band recording. Â Â
Years before, the stroke had slowed Vega down, but heâd recovered and continued making music, often remotely, vocalizing over pre-recorded tracks by electronic musicians. He wanted a different feel for this project, wanted âto feel connected,â Vaughn says, to the musicians in the room, the way it had worked when they made Cubist Blues with Chilton, a music industry rebel in his own right. That record had taken two frenzied, off-the-cuff nights, this album required only one. âWe got better at it,â Vaughn says with a chuckle, his velvet voiceâthe one Iâve so often heard on his essential and always joyous radio program and podcast The Many Moods of Ben Vaughn âunderserved by my cellular telephone (once again). Â
Vega was obsessed with the enormity of any given moment, and to that end, he insisted the band be assembled with absolutely no preparation. They would be responsible for creating, ears tuned to each other and Vegaâs incantations, a spontaneous space for his magical recitations. âItâs the only way Iâve ever worked with him,â Vaughn says. âWe would start playing, and Alan would wait a little bit,â drawing in a notepad the entire time, working on his âzillions of sketchesâ â potential self-portraits, though heâd be loathe to indulge you asking if they were â or reading his copy of the New York Post. Eventually heâd rise to the microphone. âSome of the stuff he comes up with, itâs really unbelievable,â Vaughn says, citing the elementally profound lyrics for âRiver of No Shame,â delivered for the first time as the band churned on. âThe animals are hunting, the animals are hunting/Making a break for the river/Making a break for the river/The river of no shame,â Vega riffs, over a motorik groove thatâs somehow equal parts Neu! and John Lee Hooker. Â
Vega didnât consider the marketplace at all, never considered what would become of his art after he made it, living like the embodiment of what visionary director David Lynch would describe as âthe art life.â For Vega creating was the sacred act. Creations? He could take them or leave them. âLiz, Alanâs wife, has told me that when he would finish a painting, heâd immediately paint over the canvas â sheâd have to snatch them away from him,â Vaughn says. Â
Luckily, Vaughn and company have been able to do something like that with Alan Vega After Dark, a set of songs that exist fully in their genesis, realized and recorded one night in New York City. They snatched one away from Alan, so we can pore over it. Listening to it, Vegaâs words sometimes slip past me, like they did early in our single phone call. Wait, what was that he just said? It might have been the secret of the world! But I have the luxury of knowing that even as I can return to the LP over and over again, Iâll never hear the same thing twice. âAlan was writing from the future,â Vaughn says. I think back to 2015 when, during my interview for Aquarium Drunkard, Vega swatted away my inquiries about where his visions originated: âI donât know where it comes from. People ask, âWhy?â…There is no why. Who gives a shit? Itâs not supposed to be why. Itâs supposed to be the world. The mystery.â
Kicking off the KPM Crate Diggers series is Conversation Peace (out September 3rd), a new album from Damu The Fudgemunk, the Washington, DC-based musician and producer known for his many collaborations with RawPoetic, ArchieShepp, Blu, and others, in addition to his own acclaimed solo work. “The music that would become Conversation Peace began with a trip to KPMâs London HQ in late January of 2020,â says EarlDavis (aka Damu the Fudgemunk). âI had just finished wrapping up post production on my album Ocean Bridges with Archie Shepp and Raw Poetic. As a record collector, Iâm very familiar with the legacy of the KPM brand. Listening to the entire catalogue was a history lesson and the amount of great composers and compositions in the recordings was endless. As a producer looking for textures, inspiration and grooves, the abundance of those things made it extremely difficult to narrow down what I wanted to use. From drums to sound FX to orchestras to small rhythm sections to ambient noises, I heard a wide variety of things and they were all so well produced and recorded. The history of KPM and the opportunity to collaborate with the prestigious lineage made the stakes very high for me and I knew I needed to deliver a quality product. Itâs an honor to be the first artist to release a KPM Crate Diggers title.”
âDamu the Fudgemunk came to our studio in London to carefully dig his way through the whole KPM 1000 series,â says Peter Clarke of EMI Production Music. âIf anyone is in doubt about sampling being an artform, they just need to watch him work! Itâs great to breathe new life into all these old recordings, too. And then place it straight back into library music for use in media. Exactly how it was originally intended.â Listen to âFour Better Or Worse (Pt. 1)â Feat. Nitty Scott by Damu The Fudgemunk
Developed in the mid-â60s, the now-iconic KPM 1000 series launched the golden years for KPM, with the birth of the âGreensleevesâ albums (named after their consistently plain-green record covers). Currently, the classic KPM archives boast over 30,000 original recordings by acclaimed library composers such as KeithMansfield, JohnCameron, TheMohawksfounderAlanHawkshaw, TheShadowsdrummerBrianBennett, DavidBowie and The Beatlesâ collaborator, Alan Parker, and ExoticapioneerLesBaxter. KPM has extensively recorded at studios such as Londonâs Angel and AbbeyRoad (The Beatles recorded most of their albums here during the KPM 1000 recording era).
âFor years, all of these old archive tracks have sat dormant on the LPsâundigitized and only discoverable by those that had copies or had enough money to get them via Discogs or Ebay,â says Paul Sandell, Senior Content and Distribution Manager at EMI Production Music. âThere’s a huge amount of pride here at EMI PM about KPM, and the other archive libraries. Not only is this music an important document of television music from the time, but it has a far wider cultural impact – whether from the theme music to a cult TV show, the sleazy funk of an erotic exploitation flick or as music sampled by the likes of Jay-Z, Drake, Florence and The Machine, and many more.â
âThe relationship between hip-hop and library music has always been strong,â adds Sandell. âBut this project really unifies the process between the library and the creative input of the producers. It’s a high five between the two to say ‘look whatâs possible’.â
Following last single âBetter Late Than Neverâ (video here), a song about self-discovery, the ever intriguing Wings Of Desire share new single âChoose A Lifeâ, plus announce their new EP Amun-Ra to be released Friday 13th August 2021 on WMD Recordings.
Filmed in 8mm pre-covid, the video for âChoose A Life’ is meant to feel freeing from responsibility and life in general. Somehow that feels even more poignant now.
One the track, the duo say: “Choose A Life is about our automated programming which convinced us that once we get âthereâ we will be happy. That once weâve acquired the material check list we will be fulfilled, but this is never the case. The song explores finding joy in the smaller moments of the everyday, the mundane, those micro expressions that we take for granted. And realising that you donât have to bend the world to make your mark. That it’s better to just enjoy it.“
Amun-Ra which is released on 13th August, moves on from the observant nature of debut EP End Of An Age and into a more inwardly focused journey of self-discovery. It is named after the ancient Egyptian deity, the transcendental creator of the universe and the god of light. It represents unlimited and boundless freedom. It explores the trappings of time, ageing, and looks back with a nostalgic glow on past misdealings and successes. Amun-Ra leaves breadcrumbs for anyone growing up and asking the big existential questions on life, lighting the way for the disenfranchised.
Sonically the EP continues the exploration of 60s pop songwriting, noise rock, and euphoric atmospherics, and lifts it into new horizons. Produced by the band and mixed by kindred spirit Vincent Cacchione (Caged Animals). It will include both âChoose A Lifeâ, and âBetter Late Than Neverâ.
The new EP Amun-Ra is out 13th August 2021 via WMD Recordings
Visual artist and singer-songwriter Morly (aka Katy Morley) announces her debut album âTil I Start Speaking, out August 20th on Cascine, and shares new single/video âDance to You.â Morley’s soft, swooning strain of storyteller pop has distilled across the past half decade into an increasingly hushed and heartfelt private language, as lived in as it is lyrical. Her debut full-length took shape slowly during stints in Minneapolis, Los Angeles, and London, stripping back the melodies to their essence, driven by a yearning to âreach âthe other side,â to live in and be art and music.â The songs that emerged are time-worn, aching, and acoustically rich, like hymns or traditionals, traced in piano, voice, and percussion. She describes the creation process as almost a âsubconscious exorcism,â casting out old ghosts and outgrown loves.
After establishing her singular style with a series of EPs â In Defense of My Muse (2015), Something More Holy (2016) and Sleeping In My Own Bed (2017) â Morley took some necessary time away from the public eye as she battled chronic illness. She returns now with newfound strength and focused sound. Much of âTil I Start Speaking revealed itself as she found herself falling in love with someone across the Atlantic. The Minneapolis-born artist relocated from her homebase in Los Angeles to London this year, joining her partner, who was âa beam of light irrupting into the darknessâ of her deteriorating health. The album paints a portrait of realizing youâre in love. Itâs also the result of Morley finding herself at the crossroads of graduate school and considering pursuing music full time. Morley felt adrift and estranged from herself, but year by year she’s closed that gap in incremental ways: studying piano, pursuing painting (her artwork adorns the sleeves of her entire discography), unlearning self-doubt, trusting one’s inner voice.
Working with frequent collaborator Christopher Stracey, Morley followed a muse of stillness and naturalism, allowing each composition to flower in its own fluid, elegant way â arriving finally at a sequence he quipped as ânine sleep bangers and a bop.â There is indeed a sensuous, low-lidded mood to this music, as though sung at a quiet hour in an intimate setting, a quality she ascribes to her affinity for conscious listening: âItâs in my own silence that the world really comes alive, and I see the deep connections.â Morley’s voice moves in reflective pools, spotlit but subdued, full of lilts and breathy pauses. The effect is one of patience and hidden wisdom, transmuting sorrow into strength, inspired by her hero Nina Simone’s ability to âtake the saddest feeling and alchemize it into joy.â
‘Til I Start Speaking represents a stylistic movement towards organic sounds that was hinted towards in Morleyâs previous works, blending her love of classic acoustic songwriting and minimal electronic music. This manifests in new single âDance to You,â the follow-up to previously released single âTwain Harte.â âDance to Youâ opens with piano before expanding with Morleyâs soothing voice and a velvety bass line and a mellow beat. Morley elaborates: ââDance to Youâ is about the need for–and is the vehicle for–a benevolent exorcism. It sprang from an encounter with someone so radiant to me that they helped light my way, but that I had to outgrow in order to see my own brilliance: I canât grow/inside your glow.â
The incredible accompanying video, directed by Lawrence Pumfrey and choreographed by Katya Bourviski, explores the sort of dream state and rush of inspiring infatuation, but also its malleability and destabilizing effect. âKatya and I talked about my experiences as a young artist finding my feet in a difficult industry, especially with flagging health, and the constant pressure to define and sell yourself which helped to inform the structure of the piece,â says Morley. âIt’s also partially inspired by Pina Bausch’s dance, Kontakthof.â Watch âDance to Youâ Video
Stream âTwain HarteââTil I Start Speaking Tracklist 1. Til I Start Speaking (I & II) 2. Dance to You 3. Sleeping in My Own Bed 4. Wasted5. Twain Harte 6. Up Above 7. Jazz Angel (Bill) 8. Savior Mind Tattoo 9. Superlunar 10. Eliogy 11. Feels (Bonus Track)
Keep your mind open.
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After releasing his 2018 debut DarlĂšne, the Quebecois musician Hubert Lenoir made a name for himself by ruffling a few feathers. The breakout album earned Lenoir icon status in his native Quebec, and was the rare French-language Quebec album to find international acclaim, landing Lenoir in publications like i-D, VICE, SSENSE and FADER who declared him âa pop star in any language,â on late night shows in France, where he also landed on the front page of the national newspaper Le Monde, a spot on the Polaris Prize shortlist (the first French-language record to get the nod in seven years), and even, in a bizarre turn of events, on stage at the Barclay Center opening for The Strokes at their New Years Eve show in 2019. All the while he has been a controversial and in some ways transformative figure in his home province, where his antics and transgressive attitude (his initial rise was in part catalyzed by some improvised nudity during a guest appearance on Quebecâs version of The Voice) have both upset many in the traditional media establishment and made him something of a standard bearer for a new kind of youth identity in Quebec. Now, Lenoir has returned to announce his second album, Musique directe, with a track called “SECRET” that features drums from Mac DeMarco and contributions from Kirin J Callinan and is premiering today as part of an interview with FADER.
WATCH: the video for Hubert Lenoir’s “SECRET” on THE FADER
READ: an English translation of the “SECRET” lyrics HERE
Lenoir’s rapid rise around the release of his debut album resulted in some blowback, particularly in Quebec where he’s become quite a controversial figure, and his new album is in part an attempt to portray the strangeness of his life over the last few years and the way his sudden notoriety has affected him, particularly with regards to the way the backlash he has faced has given rise to a recurrence of some of the feelings he had as an ostracized adolescent in the suburbs of Quebec City. On “SECRET,” which arrives with a video in which he assumes the role of a skunk trying to win the favor of a popular boy in his high school, Lenoir takes these feelings on directly, with a chorus in which he sends his condolences to everyone who is different like him.
“This is a song about the feeling of unshared love and being rejected when you know that itâs only because youâre different,” Lenoir explains. “It talks about social rejection and keeping those feelings for yourself because âwhatâs the pointâ and anyway you donât stand a chance. Not necessarily feeling bitterness or blaming the others but still finding the situation extremely sad and sending condolences to everyone that is like me, everyone that could live with the same ostracization in silence. A way of saying: Iâm sorry, it wonât be easy.”Â
Part-krautrock, post-house, part-funk, part-art rock, part…I don’t know what, Museum of Love‘s Life of Mammals is weird and wild.
“Your Nails Have Grown,” for instance, starts the album with Pat Mahoney and Dennis McNany‘s mechaniker krautrock synths for beats and lyrics about someone lost to time, and the extended, haunting saxophone solo by Peter Gordon is outstanding. The title track brings in ambient synths to blend with funky bass and hand percussion beats. It’s a song about facing reality and casting out illusions (“It’s a shocking truth. You were raised by wolves, but never told that rabbits eat their youth.”).
“Marching Orders” is a highly danceable track (those killer beats!), with a whistled chorus and lyrics about retreating into stability and walking away from chaos and the rat race. “Hotel at Home” could be a song about touring or living in quarantine with lyrics like “Everything you’ve done is washed away. This room wasn’t really yours anyway. Curl up and watch. Lockup extended stay.”
“Cluttered World” is a sauntering, sexy track about cutting away attachments in hopes of filling up the space in our homes and heads with better pleasures. “Ridiculous Body,” with its swaying bass and tense drums, is a witty take on toxic beauty and the ravages of time. “Flat Side” has dark-wave elements in its synths and lyrics about patience in love. The guitar on it soars like a robot hawk.
“Army of Children” is a song about regret, and not being able to fix bad habits (“When we met I was a picturesque wreck hanging around your neck…Why can I ever seem to stick to the plan?”). The addition of country guitars and Edwyn Collins-like vocals gives a cool, bluesy feel to the track, even when dance drums walk into the room. Bold horns and bouncing synth-beats propel “The Conversation,” which tells the tale of a talk going out of control in rapid time. The album closes with “Almost Certainly Not You,” in which we hear the tale of a relationship in which someone claims they’ve been telling the truth the whole time, not the other. The song is punctuated by finger snaps and synths that feel like sunlight breaking through cigarette smoke.
A lot of the album sounds like that image feels: Mysterious, yet bright. Angry, yet cheeky. Stealthy, yet bold. It’s a winner any way you slice it.