I recall Phil going on & on at me while I was on my extended
sanity leave about this band called A Sunny Day in Glasgow. What a
shite name I thought, it always rains in Glasgow doesn't it? Then, by
chance, we drove through Glasgow on a sunny day on the way to Oban
& my friend Rick stopped the car and we assisted him to shin up a
lamppost to tear down a BNP placard some numbskull racist types had
tiegripped to it (UK elections 3 years ago - hohoho) but overall, the
place seemed pretty buzzing and I've met some right characters over the
years from there. A Sunny Day in Glasgow, the band, are actually from
Philly, USA, based around members of the Daniel's family, and make the
FINEST psychedelic shoegazey dreampop you could wish for, surfing the
various tidal waves of post MBV noise pop & blissed out electronic
rock. On 'Ashes Grammar' some passages share affiliations with the kind
of euphoric future noise that Animal Collective throw around, as well
as some dancier, rhythmic leanings ala Seefeel, Flowchart et al and
their subsequent viral like contemporaries such as Outhud! Throughout,
there's frisky percussion, spangled guitar shapes, fervent bass
thrumming, rapturous hazy vocals, eerie hypnagogic sound blurring,
delirious choral pop and some of the freshest, most ecstatic sounds to
explode from the universally adored dreampop canon in years, keeping it
remarkably progressive & ecstatic but retaining a homely edge. This
is the sound of stargaze, there's no scowling at scuffed desert boots
through greasy fringes for these guys. I'm kind of reminded on a couple
of tracks of when The Field Mice turned their hands to dancier material
and early Saint Etienne, but with the best in today's technology being
gracefully harnessed. A fabulous ride indeed! CD mainly, but we have
got a tiny handful of coloured vinyl, strictly on a 1st come, 1st
served basis!
Love this record? Hate it? Tell us.
Sound clips for Ashes Grammar by A Sunny Day In Glasgow: on vinyl at Norman Records UK. Double LP (vinyl), Mis Ojos Discos, OJO004 , £19.99.
Opening with a ten second homage to Estonian composer Arvo Part, it s immediately apparent that A Sunny Day in Glasgow s new album, Ashes Grammar, is going to be a much more visceral outing than their 2007 album debut, Scribble Mural Comic Journal. It takes a few minutes for the record to even begin to reveal itself, as a swarm of 1950s acapella ( Secrets at the prom ) gives way to resonant drones, room noise, and sub bass ( Slaughter killing carnage ). It s here that Failure unexpectedly kicks in with a tribal stomp and a fluttering guitar acting as a pair of wings, lifting the circular chants of the song s melody off the ground. It s all at once joyous, insecure, and blissed-out and sounds nothing like we ve heard from A Sunny Day in Glasgow before. Ashes Grammar is far more nuanced than Scribble, but there s still a cellular logic at play throughout. The brief, shimmering loop that is Lights turns out to be the very pulse behind the sun-kissed, ambient pop of Passionate Introverts, a feel-good song perfectly suited to accompany daydreams or dancing by yourself in your bedroom. However, even at their most accessible there s always an indescribable otherworldliness flowing through the band s music, one that is fully revealed during Blood White. Like famed composer/sound experimentalist Alvin Lucier s groundbreaking piece, I Am Sitting in a Room, during this track you can practically hear the shape of the room resonating in the frequencies of voices and synths that had been amplified, recorded, replayed and recorded again and again, the undulating tones slowly drifting into a cosmic wash of bubbling electronics and guitar. Yes, in many ways this is a different group than the one we first heard back in 2007, but with Ben continuing his role as the principal songwriter, there s no doubt this Ashes Grammar could be from any other band than A Sunny Day in Glasgow. And once again, dream pop has been re-imagined.