đ Kostenloser weltweiter Versand fĂŒr alle Bestellungen!Jetzt einkaufen

RESIDUAL ECHOES - the middle path LP
In the grand tradition of albums consisting of sidelong tracks, The Middle Path ranks among the best. How great is it? On the level of the latest opus by Decimus (NNCKâs Pat Murano), Tangerine Dreamâs Zeit and Ash Ra Tempelâs first LP. Taking collage rock to college, band leader Adam Payne and drummer Matthew Clark present their loftiest contribution yet to the out-rock canon. They let their freak flag fly high, but with a disciplined air. âBush Pij / Sometimesâ starts with a bulbous, stunt-rock charge that evokes first-four-albums Black Sabbath, Thin Lizzy and the heaviest parts of Focusâs Hocus Pocus. After working the listener into a lather, Residual Echoes downshift into a bong-breaking interlude featuring Payneâs nonchalant, deep-voiced plaint: âWhy does it seem so hard? / ⊠/ Sometimes people make a fool out of me.â Such woe is swept away by headbanging passages full of torrid, florid guitar solos and the kind of explosive drumming that makes fans of Bill Ward and Keith Moon paradiddle all over themselves. Later, an ominous tolling redolent of Sonic Youthâs âHalloweenâ conjures a beautifully haunting, desolate comedown. What a trip. But this is mere warm-up for âA Marriage,â the pinnacle of Residual Echoesâ career and one of 2013âs most excellent and action-packed tracks. It begins like the greatest facsimile of âHallogalloâ one has ever heard (and there have been many): motorik bliss boogie with flute gently fluctuating in the airstream, bolstered by burbling bass, gull-cry guitar and nipple gongs. Around six-and-a-half minutes in, things get incredibly anthemic in a Meat Puppets Up on the Sun way. Bonus: The guitar solo at the twelve-minute mark flares and curlicues like Wayne Rogers on the worldâs best trucker speed. Near the end, a strangulated feedback concerto carries the listener bewilderedly to the runoff groove. The Middle Path turns out to be the righteous route.
In the grand tradition of albums consisting of sidelong tracks, The Middle Path ranks among the best. How great is it? On the level of the latest opus by Decimus (NNCKâs Pat Murano), Tangerine Dreamâs Zeit and Ash Ra Tempelâs first LP. Taking collage rock to college, band leader Adam Payne and drummer Matthew Clark present their loftiest contribution yet to the out-rock canon. They let their freak flag fly high, but with a disciplined air. âBush Pij / Sometimesâ starts with a bulbous, stunt-rock charge that evokes first-four-albums Black Sabbath, Thin Lizzy and the heaviest parts of Focusâs Hocus Pocus. After working the listener into a lather, Residual Echoes downshift into a bong-breaking interlude featuring Payneâs nonchalant, deep-voiced plaint: âWhy does it seem so hard? / ⊠/ Sometimes people make a fool out of me.â Such woe is swept away by headbanging passages full of torrid, florid guitar solos and the kind of explosive drumming that makes fans of Bill Ward and Keith Moon paradiddle all over themselves. Later, an ominous tolling redolent of Sonic Youthâs âHalloweenâ conjures a beautifully haunting, desolate comedown. What a trip. But this is mere warm-up for âA Marriage,â the pinnacle of Residual Echoesâ career and one of 2013âs most excellent and action-packed tracks. It begins like the greatest facsimile of âHallogalloâ one has ever heard (and there have been many): motorik bliss boogie with flute gently fluctuating in the airstream, bolstered by burbling bass, gull-cry guitar and nipple gongs. Around six-and-a-half minutes in, things get incredibly anthemic in a Meat Puppets Up on the Sun way. Bonus: The guitar solo at the twelve-minute mark flares and curlicues like Wayne Rogers on the worldâs best trucker speed. Near the end, a strangulated feedback concerto carries the listener bewilderedly to the runoff groove. The Middle Path turns out to be the righteous route.
$11.58
RESIDUAL ECHOES - the middle path LPâ
$11.58
Description
In the grand tradition of albums consisting of sidelong tracks, The Middle Path ranks among the best. How great is it? On the level of the latest opus by Decimus (NNCKâs Pat Murano), Tangerine Dreamâs Zeit and Ash Ra Tempelâs first LP. Taking collage rock to college, band leader Adam Payne and drummer Matthew Clark present their loftiest contribution yet to the out-rock canon. They let their freak flag fly high, but with a disciplined air. âBush Pij / Sometimesâ starts with a bulbous, stunt-rock charge that evokes first-four-albums Black Sabbath, Thin Lizzy and the heaviest parts of Focusâs Hocus Pocus. After working the listener into a lather, Residual Echoes downshift into a bong-breaking interlude featuring Payneâs nonchalant, deep-voiced plaint: âWhy does it seem so hard? / ⊠/ Sometimes people make a fool out of me.â Such woe is swept away by headbanging passages full of torrid, florid guitar solos and the kind of explosive drumming that makes fans of Bill Ward and Keith Moon paradiddle all over themselves. Later, an ominous tolling redolent of Sonic Youthâs âHalloweenâ conjures a beautifully haunting, desolate comedown. What a trip. But this is mere warm-up for âA Marriage,â the pinnacle of Residual Echoesâ career and one of 2013âs most excellent and action-packed tracks. It begins like the greatest facsimile of âHallogalloâ one has ever heard (and there have been many): motorik bliss boogie with flute gently fluctuating in the airstream, bolstered by burbling bass, gull-cry guitar and nipple gongs. Around six-and-a-half minutes in, things get incredibly anthemic in a Meat Puppets Up on the Sun way. Bonus: The guitar solo at the twelve-minute mark flares and curlicues like Wayne Rogers on the worldâs best trucker speed. Near the end, a strangulated feedback concerto carries the listener bewilderedly to the runoff groove. The Middle Path turns out to be the righteous route.











