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A_Northern_Soul wrote:Bloody hell, lads - this marketing campaign is getting out of hand:
Wildfire tackled in Pentland Hills
Gazebo4 wrote:Jholy smokes this sounds so fucking lush and clean and full and crisp, etc, etc.
kid wrote:Alright, I’m gonna stand up and say it. This is there best album. This is the one I’ve been waiting for since I first heard them in 1998. It’s the album I always wanted them to make but, thought they never would.
I’ve always wanted them to lean hard in to the trippy hypnotic stuff. There’s glimpses of it throughout their discography, the dark lit futuristic sound of June 9th, when telephasic workshop is at its crescendo, the off kilter sound of gyroscope, the last part of split your infinities. My friend and I used to have discussions about this, ‘why don’t they make an album where just totally go for it and lean in to that sound?’
Well, for me, they’ve finally done it. It’s sad in a way, I can’t help but feel that the reason they released this album now is because it’s a parting gift. Finally giving long time hardcore fans what they always wanted as they say goodbye.
There are so many parts of this album that just transport me to boc land and feeds me boc shaped things!
This album makes me think of being at a festival, it’s 4am, the main stages all finished hours ago, you wander around half coming down, half still tripping and find a stall selling chai tea run by a couple of hippies. They have a sound system blasting music, this is the album that’s playing.
akirako wrote:I'm really enjoying it. I'm surprised by how upfront the vocal samples are, and by how sharp some parts of the production are, as in not fuzzy and warbly. I do think it seems far less forbidding and messed up than their earlier stuff, despite the dark themes. There still are weird voices in the background but I feel it's a more transparent album than Geogaddi? At any rate I've never being able to get into their more pastoral side so I'm ecstatic.
turquoise70 wrote:I'm a simple creature; my favorite band puts out their first new LP in 13 years, I stay up all night listening to it on repeat

akirako wrote:akirako wrote:I'm really enjoying it. I'm surprised by how upfront the vocal samples are, and by how sharp some parts of the production are, as in not fuzzy and warbly. I do think it seems far less forbidding and messed up than their earlier stuff, despite the dark themes. There still are weird voices in the background but I feel it's a more transparent album than Geogaddi? At any rate I've never being able to get into their more pastoral side so I'm ecstatic.
Actually, I'm curious about whether you feel this one is scary. I haven't listened to Geogaddi in years because it's just too scary for me, but I don't know if it's because I was maybe 14 or 15 when I first listened to it, because of my personal fears, or because their music has really become less menacing. Even The Campfire Headphase feels dangerous to me: I remember one occasion where I fell asleep to it and woke up terrified during either Oscar See Through Red Eye or Slow This Bird Down. I noped out so hard I think that might the last time I tried listening to that album. I also remember sitting in an empty train at 5 or 6 in the morning, waiting for it to start, and trying to listen to Geogaddi. I noped out during Gyroscope if I remember correctly.
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