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| フォーマット | CDアルバム |
| 発売日 | 2019年05月24日 |
| 国内/輸入 | 輸入 |
| レーベル | Marathon |
| 構成数 | 1 |
| パッケージ仕様 | - |
| 規格品番 | MA178CD |
| SKU | 5052442015383 |
構成数 : 1枚
合計収録時間 : 00:36:00
Personnel: Stina Tweeddale (vocals, guitars, keyboards); John Congleton (guitars, keyboards, percussion); Deborah Knox-Hewson (piano, vibraphone, drums, percussion).
Audio Mixer: John Congleton.
Recording information: Sargent Sutdios, USA.
Honeyblood's first album as Stina Tweeddale's solo project, In Plain Sight finds her reveling in her freedom by focusing and expanding her music. While former drummer Cat Myers was on tour with Mogwai, Tweeddale holed up by herself to write these songs, and her solitary creative process convinced her she needed to record these songs on her own, too. Working with producer John Congleton -- who's shown an almost uncanny ability to help artists such as St. Vincent, Angel Olsen, and Priests shore up their strengths and uncover new dimensions within their music -- Tweeddale sharpens the bigger, heavier sound she introduced on Babes Never Die. Boasting a poison apple shine and audacious musical flourishes, In Plain Sight's songs are as appealing as they are dangerous, shifting from spooky to tough to playful to alluring and back again. As on Honeyblood's previous album, Tweeddale leads with some of the album's punchiest tracks. Inspired by a woman who haunted her night terrors, "She's a Nightmare" is equally creepy and catchy, evoking the likes of mid-'90s Throwing Muses or Magnapop with its vivid imagery ("I'm a dormouse/And she's the cat") and barbed hooks. On "The Third Degree," Tweeddale uses stiletto-heeled '60s girl group pop to give the brush-off to an ex who might as well be from her nightmares, while glam rock beats and big, buzzy synths hit home her desperate devotion on "Kiss from the Devil." The twists continue as In Plain Sight reveals itself, spanning "The Tarantella"'s torch song gone grunge to the black-hole synth pop of "You're a Trick." On moments like these and "Take the Wheel"'s impending doom, the album feels like a series of cliffhangers from which Tweeddale narrowly escapes like the final girl from a horror movie. By the time she closes In Plain Sight's world of illusions and nightmares with the deceptively gentle "Harmless," she pulls off the trick of turning Honeyblood into a more cohesive, more imaginative prospect than ever before. ~ Heather Phares
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