supported by 50 fans who also own “We brooked no heroes, yet they whispered of the Saint who massacred a trillion soldiers on the cusp of Orion”
It was a bit too much and samey by the end for me, but if you like dark atmospheres, if you are really interested in sound design or you enjoy the challenge of music that tries to wear you down, you should definitely check this record out.
I loved the echo-drenched drums and percussion and synths and hard to describe sounds on this, but it stays with the same sonic ideas for too long for me to enjoy to try to withstand the harsh wall of sounds minisculebarber
supported by 44 fans who also own “We brooked no heroes, yet they whispered of the Saint who massacred a trillion soldiers on the cusp of Orion”
Question: how can I like this amount of noises and enjoy listening to this album? Answer: you shouldn’t listen to it with your ears: I close my eyes and get dragged in this chaotic world where sounds seems to not collide but it is just an impression: on this record everything makes perfectly sense. losfastidios
Ebullient, unapologetically queer hyperpop from the San Diego upstart, featuring collaborations with Fire-Toolz, Erin Corbett, and more. Bandcamp New & Notable Jul 14, 2021
supported by 41 fans who also own “We brooked no heroes, yet they whispered of the Saint who massacred a trillion soldiers on the cusp of Orion”
they picked the cotton that saved the world. that picked cotton propelled u.s. economy; a unique capitalist setup. (though anglo saxon colonizers are not unique.) so many pop stars and hip hop billboard mainstays trumpet u.s. capitalism ad nauseam; or escapism & distraction.
"Don't Die," also powerful.
"i don't believe they lies. don't believe their truth, need they heads for proof" -- that's direct and powerful.
the violinist Saydah Ruz stands out here, i think. Jeremy Leaming