Description
Massive pedalled-out blasts of sound tied to delicate riffs. Echo & the Bunnymen songs played by Wilco. Biscuits swimming in gravy. George Clooneys salt and pepper beard. LP3 is a rare achievement: It doesnt fail at being anything. Its a collision of influences, not a contrived mixture of them. That sounds like marketing speak, but take a second to think about it. You could say this record is Tom Petty meets Spiritualized or you could say its Hot Snakes doing Swans, and youd be right in both cases. Its music from men who listen to music.
Compare the unapologetic rock swell of album-opener Wales to the understated lyrics-first approach to the next track, Separate Songs. Clearly the same band, but exercising different ghosts on each song. Thats what LP3 provides. A spectrum broad enough for the swaying drunk at the show and the introspective headphone commuter. Wistful; hopeful; direct; coy; bombastic; pensive. Its a human experience, or at least a French film.
The band chose to return to Miner Street Studio and long-time friend/collaborator Jon Low for the recording of LP3. It was a good choice. This is the bands best-sounding record. Every instrument is bigger on this album than on previous efforts. The vocals often puncture quiet moments to such perfect, unnerving effect that you could believe its happening in your head. The trust Low and the band has been building over the years is absolute these days and the result is a record that fills a room even when coming out of laptop speakers. Patrick Kindlon (Self Defense Family)






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