- Music
- 17 Jan 03
Geography For The Leaving
From the same anything-goes philosophical school as unclassifiable shapeshifter bands like The Tycho Brahe, and in the noble tradition of weirdnik found-noise perverters like Daniel Figgis, comes this creepy, melody-dripping, fantastical Nightmare After Christmas audio scarytale. Not since Richard D. James has a band been capable of so many pretty ways to fuck with your mind: they’ve got bizarre Here Come the Warm Jets-era Eno-pop goofiness, (Stereo)lab-tested grooves, and entire unmapped jungles full of gurgly/wooshy/singy homemade samples and musical plot-twists, to name just a few.
Add their delightful (and largely language-free) vocalisations on top – wistful dream-harmonies one minute, burbling monster-under-the-bed noises the next – and you’re at the aural midway point between Warp Records, the Beach Boys and the National Geographic Channel. Totally amazing.
RELATED
- Music
- 29 May 26
Role Model announces new album Chuck Timely & The Hourglass
- Music
- 28 May 26
Paul Heaton announces new album Jenius
RELATED
- Music
- 22 May 26
Olivia Rodrigo releases new single ‘The Cure’
- Music
- 15 May 26
Shakira and Burna Boy release new single ‘Dai Dai’
- Music
- 08 May 26
Harry Styles shares music video for 'Dance No More'
- Music
- 15 Apr 26
Massive Attack tease new single featuring Tom Waits
- Music
- 01 Apr 26