|
Staff pick of the week...
This week...Jim picks it!
Artist: KVLR
Title: KVLR
Price: $13.00 
|
Tracks
on this CD: |
| Last
Rhyme |
| Fed
On The Hook |
| Slow
Clapping |
| Spit |
| The
Red Bulletin |
| Traitors
and Thieves |
| Road
Closure |
| Birthcam |
| Whitewash |
| What's
Left Belongs To No One |
A
Northern Sweden guitar juggernaut weaned on American hardcore,
postpunk, and postrock, KVLR has transcended their influences,
and their third album sports a collective off-the-charts
indierock IQ. Brains and brawn it turns out, because this
also the sound of Interpol and their ilk getting an asskicking…aggressive
and apocalyptic and retro in regards to the glory days of
Amphetamine Reptile and Dischord. Déjà vu so thick it’s intoxicating,
protean postpunk exploiting luminous melodies, breakneck
rhythms, and industrial-strength dissonance, all rendered
with alarming humanity. Space rock reveries mingling with
apocalyptic rock, delirious gang harmonies and instrumental
passages so savage and tribal, you’d swear GY!BE was hiding
out in there somewhere. If you can withstand the awesome
power of “Slow Clapping” let me know! I could go on and on,
but really the press has been doing all the talking this
past month…
Filter Magazine: “Welcome to the world of KVLR, a Scandinavian band who play
wall-of-sound-rock with the kind of energy that knocks around in your head until
you pass out from sheer exhaustion. The drums on [“Slow Clapping”] pound like
a factory line, and the chorus is a maelstrom of pop purity as backing vocals
bend and shift into a My Bloody Valentine-like state of reverie… By recording
most of their material live, KVLR allow the spatial arrangements of post-rock
to infiltrate the energy of post-punk and the textural beauty of shoegazing.
The end result is a strong amalgam of some of the best music that can be made
with guitars.”
High Bias: “Postpunk as a style, rather than a timeframe, is best heard and recognized
rather than described. That said, KVLR (formally Kevlar) should be in the music
dictionary in place of a definition of postpunk. The quartet recalls the glory
days of Gang of Four, Wire, Mission of Burma and even Sonic Youth with infectious
enthusiasm and subtle melodicism. Plus KVLR is Swedish and has that magic Nordic
pixie dust with which every other band from the region seems to be sprinkled.”
All Music Guide: “The band's admitted influence by bands like Chavez, Swervedriver,
Sonic Youth shine through, as the foursome embraces dynamic guitar and feedback,
showcasing an uncanny cohesiveness from beginning to end. Opening with the churning
frenzy of "“Last Rhyme," the band maintains a blistering pace through most of
the disc.”
|