Rock/Pop
CDアルバム

Panic Blooms

0.0

販売価格

¥
2,690
税込
ポイント15%還元

廃盤

在庫状況 について

フォーマット CDアルバム
発売日 2018年05月04日
国内/輸入 輸入
レーベルRad Cult
構成数 1
パッケージ仕様 -
規格品番 RDCU322
SKU 643157443544

構成数 : 1枚
合計収録時間 : 00:42:24
Six years, one limited mini-album of outtakes, and three Tobacco solo records on from 2012's Cobra Juicy, Black Moth Super Rainbow returned with their long-awaited seventh album, Panic Blooms. While the group's previous few full-lengths found them increasingly sharpening the fidelity of their neon-hued, cracked-prism psych-pop, Panic Blooms is one of their sludgiest-sounding albums in years, applying the filthy tape smudge of Tobacco's solo work to BMSR's songwriting approach. His vocals are still masked by vocoders, but the lyrics are more direct and introspective than they've ever been. Songs like "Panic Blooms" and "Bad Fuckin Times" seem like reactions to the sociopolitical climate, but without addressing specific issues. The songs artfully express fear, alienation, and disenchantment with vivid, sinister imagery ("Razorblade in a tangerine") coexisting with more forthright yearnings of acceptance and happiness ("Should get a little more sunshine/Should keep a little less haze around me"). Sonically, BMSR have made brighter, more accessible records in the past, but they've never nailed the sweet-and-sour flavor as much as they do here. Every track is doused in tape decay, making it rough on the ears, but the charred melodies are so rich and sweet that it all ends up sounding eerily relaxing. Songs like "New Breeze" recall the most nausea-inducing moments of Loveless, with slippery glissandos doused in so many effects that they seem three-dimensional. The beats are mainly slowed to a disorienting crawl, but they perk up on occasion, such as "Aerosol Weather" and "Mr No One." Anxiety-stricken yet somehow finding ways to enjoy life, BMSR sound creatively re-energized on the excellent Panic Blooms. ~ Paul Simpson

  1. 1.[CDアルバム]
    1. 1.
      Panic Blooms
    2. 2.
      Baby's in the Void
    3. 3.
      Rip on Through
    4. 4.
      One More Ear
    5. 5.
      Bad Fuckin Times
    6. 6.
      New Breeze
    7. 7.
      Aerosol Weather
    8. 8.
      June July 28
    9. 9.
      Bottomless Face
    10. 10.
      Permanent Hole
    11. 11.
      To the Beat of a Creeper
    12. 12.
      We Might Come Back
    13. 13.
      Harmlessly
    14. 14.
      Backwash
    15. 15.
      Sunset Curses
    16. 16.
      Mr No One

作品の情報

メイン
アーティスト: Black Moth Super Rainbow

商品の紹介

Spin - "[B]y paring back much of the instrumentation on PANIC BLOOMS, the band offers some of the most unsettling, moving, and catchy work they've ever accomplished..."
Rovi

Six years, one limited mini-album of outtakes, and three Tobacco solo records on from 2012's Cobra Juicy, Black Moth Super Rainbow returned with their long-awaited seventh album, Panic Blooms. While the group's previous few full-lengths found them increasingly sharpening the fidelity of their neon-hued, cracked-prism psych-pop, Panic Blooms is one of their sludgiest-sounding albums in years, applying the filthy tape smudge of Tobacco's solo work to BMSR's songwriting approach. His vocals are still masked by vocoders, but the lyrics are more direct and introspective than they've ever been. Songs like "Panic Blooms" and "Bad Fuckin Times" seem like reactions to the sociopolitical climate, but without addressing specific issues. The songs artfully express fear, alienation, and disenchantment with vivid, sinister imagery ("Razorblade in a tangerine") coexisting with more forthright yearnings of acceptance and happiness ("Should get a little more sunshine/Should keep a little less haze around me"). Sonically, BMSR have made brighter, more accessible records in the past, but they've never nailed the sweet-and-sour flavor as much as they do here. Every track is doused in tape decay, making it rough on the ears, but the charred melodies are so rich and sweet that it all ends up sounding eerily relaxing. Songs like "New Breeze" recall the most nausea-inducing moments of Loveless, with slippery glissandos doused in so many effects that they seem three-dimensional. The beats are mainly slowed to a disorienting crawl, but they perk up on occasion, such as "Aerosol Weather" and "Mr No One." Anxiety-stricken yet somehow finding ways to enjoy life, BMSR sound creatively re-energized on the excellent Panic Blooms. ~ Paul Simpson
Rovi

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