RIYL : My Bloody Valentine, Pixies, Asobi Seksu, Serena Maneesh. Venerating Phil Spector as the patron saint of sonic emotion, their
premise is strikingly simple. Rock music should be beautiful. Casey’s guitar work elevates grand canyon reverb to high art. More canvas than skeletal structure, its wall of sound is huge and enveloping. Giving form to these dreamscapes are Anna’s simple, pretty vocal lines, which she colors with clean, clear guitar picking. Out of the sonic swirl, Rachel manages to distill a bass line somewhere between rock-steady groove and the root melody of a lullaby. Her parts construct a visible road map for Matt to effortlessly meander through. With bells and shakers sitting on a table beside the hihat, his drumming is more orchestral than rock’n’roll and is peppered with beautiful triangle and xylophone melodies. On Sun Come Undone, their debut full length, Thrushes craft gorgeous noise pop and swirling dream rock. Opening with the cavernous drumming of “Aidan Quinn” into the revved-up, fuzzed out Jesus And Mary Chain-esque “Heartbeats,” and carried through the nods to Deadcan Dance in “Loyalty” and haunted claps of guitar thunder on “Ghost Train,” to the final feedback soaked fallout of “The Hardest Part,” this is the sound of blood on blood. From the period of time between March 22nd-April 5th, Thrushes was the 4th Most Blogged About Band In The World, according to blog statistic aggregator elbo.ws, and 2 of their tracks were among the 15 Most Blogged MP3s in the World during that time, at #9 and #14
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