Eat Skull
Wild And Inside
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Description: | CD on Siltbreeze |
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| Format: | CD | |
| Genre(s): | Experimental/Math/Noise Rock | |
| Label: | Siltbreeze | |
| Price: |
£13.39
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|
| Availability: | In stock. Dispatched in 1 working day. |
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0 items in your cart, sadly. |
Eat Skull
|
|
|
Description: | CD on Siltbreeze |
|---|---|---|
| Format: | CD | |
| Genre(s): | Experimental/Math/Noise Rock | |
| Label: | Siltbreeze | |
| Price: |
£13.39
|
|
| Availability: | In stock. Dispatched in 1 working day. |
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...according to our Brett on 08 April 2009.
Steady on, April is gearing up to be the Heavy Hitting month of the
year so far: A new lp from Eat Skull?? oh yes... one of our fave LPs
from last year was their record on Siltbreeze...Eat Skull’s Sick to
Death received worldwide accolades for its frantic pacing,
unimpeachable lyric quality, and nugget after nugget of pop hooks
buried under a gob of lo-fi muzz. On this follow-up, fans and critics
will find a cleaner, more inimitable Eat Skull at work. Frontman Rob
Enbom has outdone himself with both lyrics and structure on Wild and
Inside, and the band as a whole rises to the challenge of nixing the
lo-fi tag for a sound that’s less... antecedent. Gone is the wall of
crud that prevents discerning listeners from identifying the
instrumental play-by-play; in its stead, a set of crafted songs recall
the paisley punk of The Last and the rural-delica of Great Plains, as
well as nodding to the sanguine pop of early Flying Nun bands such as
The Double Happys. Wild and Inside is a grower for the ages. It
breathes deep and exhales perfectly. Look for Eat Skull at this year’s
SXSW and trekking the world over throughout 2009. This is primo scuzz
of the highest order, none of that limpwristed NME favoured crud, this
does the job. Lo-fi wallof-crud sound replaced by a set of crafted
tunes that take influence from the Paisley Underground, Midwestern
psychedelica, and the early Flying Nun roster.
PRESS: “On their
first album Sick to Death, the Portland, Ore., band Eat Skull mashes
together almost everything that’s great about trashy art-punk, weirdo
fuzz-garage, skuzzy punk-pop, Kiwi garage-rock and off-kilter
bedroom-strum. ...once your ears adjust, you realize that it’s all
killer, no filler.”—Pitchfork (8.3 rating)