ブラック・フェミニスト・パンク・トリオBIG JOANIEや、グライムパンク・デュオBOB VYLANと共に新世代のブラック・ブリティッシュ・ギター・ミュージックの最前線に立つ、UKロンドン拠点の男女黒人4人組シューゲイザー・バンド、WHITELANDS が、SONIC CATHEDRALより放つ大注目デビューアルバム!
ヴォーカリストのETIENNEが、SLOWDIVEのKEXPでのパフォーマンス (YOUTUBEで偶然)を見て以来、表向きはシューゲイザー・バンドとして活動。その後、SLOWDIVEのツアーサポートやBBC RADIO 6 MUSIC、SPOTIFYなどでシングルがプレイリスト入りするなど急速に注目を集めるバンド待望のフル・アルバムです。帝国主義、人種差別などをテーマにした政治的な歌詞、シューゲイザーに留まらずEMO、GOTHなど様々なジャンルを溶け込ませたバンド・サウンドは今後も目が離せません。昨年、同レーベルから素晴らしいEPをリリースしたDEARYのDOTTIEもヴォーカリストとして参加しています。
「白人男性がロマンチックで、繊細で、感情的で、ドリーミーな音楽を作るのはOKで、それとは対照的に若い黒人男性は怒りに満ちた音楽を作るべきだという概念が根底にあるんだ。私たちはこんなステレオタイプに育ってきたから、ホワイトランドを目にした時、不思議に思うんだろうね。」
発売・販売元 提供資料(2024/02/08)
The origin story of Whitelands is an interesting one in that the members coalesced more around shared experiences with neurodivergence and race than around common musical inspirations. Named for the college at Londons Roehampton University where he played his first show, the project was started by singer/guitarist Etienne Quartey-Papafio, who released a varied but more straightforward indie rock album under the moniker before devoting the project to shoegaze after watching a Slowdive Live on KEXP performance. The bandmates he assembled for the shift in direction had backgrounds in R&B, techno, and punk (including Vanessa Govinden, touring bassist for Big Joanie) before coming on board. It may be surprising then that they create dense, hazy textures quite well and a little less surprising that they put their own subtle spins on the style, including lyrics from outsider perspectives and Govindens animated, often-melodic bass parts. On their debut album, light is a recurring theme that begins with the title, Night-Bound Eyes Are Blind to the Day, a phrase taken from Kahlil Gibrans century-old book of prose poetry, The Prophet. Echo-washed opening track "Setting Sun" is one of the records bouncier entries, although Quartey-Papafios ruminative, half-indecipherable lyrics help to set a consistently yearning tone, as do lines like "I’d like to understand/Meaning behind/What they mean I/Can’t seem to find a clue." Some of the more melodic songs here include the slightly more clarified "The Prophet & I" and the evocative "Born in Understanding" ("blazing flames on uncovered truths," "the moon rose asunder from ether"), while tracks like "How It Feels" and "Chosen Light" revel in pools of harmony and dissonance. "Now Heres the Weather" closes the album with something stylistically in between that leaves an impression with lyrics that address Brexit, racism, imperialism, and related concerns with increasingly noise-engulfed vocals. ~ Marcy Donelson
Rovi