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SUNBURNED HAND OF THE MAN - Nimbus LP
Three Lobed and Sunburned Hand of the Man have a long history. The label has been releasing the groupâs output for nearly two of its three decades of making music. As Sunburned has picked up momentum again in recent years, the labelâs been right there, releasing the highly acclaimed "Pick a Day to Die" in 2020, and in late 2022 reissuing a 20th anniversary edition of "Headdress", the classic and confounding first Sunburned LP. Label head Cory Rayborn acted as the catalyst for storyteller Kelly Davis to assemble "No Way Out", an astonishing eight-part oral history podcast released by Aquarium Drunkard in 2023. It was a free-wheeling kaleidoscope of a project, mirroring the bandâs own elusiveness and flux. Sunburned life was related, analyzed, mythologized, dissected, and obfuscated.
The podcast caught some key points. At its core Sunburned is both a familial and mercurial entity. Thereâs not a fixed lineup, yet those within its borders are fervently committed. Thereâs not so much a consistent sound as a spiritual throughline, straddling god-loves-a-drunk mysticism, bombastic basement show ethos, the far reaches of post-hippie underground esoterica, and making the gallery world scratch their heads instead of their chins.
In January of 2023, Sunburned gathered for a wintery week of sessions at Big Blue, Adam Langellottiâs studio/house in Turnerâs Falls, MA. With the cozy setting and Sunburnedâs nature, it was a family affair, with members dropping in and out, cooking meals, going through old photos, making beer runs. The current Sunburned core was there, while Michael Josef K and Matt Krefting were back in the mix after years away, and Sarah Gibbons was making her proper recorded debut.
Plus, original member Phil Franklin was back in the States after three years of travel restrictions from his current home in Australia. Sunburned fans might know Franklinâs Mint, Philâs song-oriented project that involves other Sunburneds as musicians, mixing original compositions with covers. On "Nimbus", heâs got one of each, as the Mint gets folded into the larger band. âIshkabibble Magooâ is a jaunty earworm of the highest caliber, weaving hilarious, ingenious wordplay into an infectious melody. And the coded etymology of the title is hard to beatââIshkabibbleâ can mean âDonât worry,â while âMagooâ can refer to someone whoâs overly wholesome. So, like, who cares, square? On âLily Thin,â Franklin leads a cover of the Sun City Girlsâ âCruel & Thin,â itself a re-working of âLeĂŻli Twilâ by Younes Megri. Itâs all campfire flicker and smoke, featuring a stately organ solo from P.G. Six thatâs nothing short of miraculous.
Then there are the readings. Sunburned is no stranger to the spoken word. Impromptu rants and missives are common. They backed the legendary poet Ira Cohen during performances in the early 2000s. Agony interspersed jams with readings. On last yearâs Hypnotape, band members read from a stack of books passed around the studio. But something about the spoken word pieces on "Nimbus" feels different.
As the record begins, atop a delicate bedding of Shannon Ketchâs sequenced synthesizer pulses, Sarah Gibbonsâ meandering Mellotron, and the twinkle of bells, the poet Peter Gizzi intones the word âNimbus.â Heâs naming the poem heâs about to read, the record youâre about to hear, describing the music Sunburned makes. âItâs so random becoming a self,â he reflects, the words confessional and ghostly, the voice urgent and tender. Gizziâs a newer member of the Sunburned orbit, but has been a serious presence at recent live shows.
The bulk of the LPâs second side consists of two longer poetry-based pieces. âConsider the Woundâ is Gizziâs again. The music is darker, the reading more punctuated and pointed. Gizzi rides the syllables, following the words up and down their scales, then slamming the brakes for blunt statements. The band is fuller here, looser, more churning. More than just words over music, itâs an emotionally wrenching experience. The album closer, âHilltop Garden Lament,â is a funereal thump, with Matt Krefting reading this time. His voice is full of playful, deadpan beatnik violence while the instruments (acoustic guitars, drums, various keyboards) swirl in a witchy invocation. Itâs fun to play in the dark.
Bolting the components together are a series of instrumental fantasias. âThe Lollygaggerâ is a funky, dreamy groove from John Moloney, Michael K, and Rob Thomas, with charging, chiming synths from Taylor Richardson, Ketch, and Conrad Capistran leading the way to the battlefield. On âBrainticket,â Gibbonsâ vocals recall the haunt of A.C. Marias or âMelody Laughterâ-era Nico, and Ron Schneidermanâs bright golden guitar sounds like a honeyslide from heaven. âWalker Talkerâ highlights the hot-tar-heat-stroke of Jeremy Pisaniâs guitar while the Mellotron, helmed by Capistran this time (Sunburned shares their toys), comments with cloudlike splendor.
As with all Sunburned records, the compositions were done on the fly. Gizzi rolled up and busted out his manuscript for "Fierce Elegy" (Wesleyan Press), then still unreleased. Krefting read spontaneously from a pile of his notebooks. Franklin had âIshkabibble Magooâ in his back pocket, but no one expected it and Gibbons unraveled harmonies in real time. If the setting is right, magic will happen. And so, this record.
For the cover art, Sunburned pulled another master into orbit. Video and installation artist and David Bowie collaborator Tony Oursler lent an image of his multimedia sculpture âSpEcTrUm,â a collage of digital chaos within the silhouette of a haloed, meditating figure. The image perfectly evokes the aura of the record, and the band itself. Thereâs no unifying theory of Sunburned, nor should there be. There isnât even a notion of forward momentum. There is only time as a liquid property, looping and infinite. It is truly a nimbus, an atmosphere, a bright and golden disk investing a group of humans, a cloud so full it can only bring forth rain.
Donât be a square!Â
The podcast caught some key points. At its core Sunburned is both a familial and mercurial entity. Thereâs not a fixed lineup, yet those within its borders are fervently committed. Thereâs not so much a consistent sound as a spiritual throughline, straddling god-loves-a-drunk mysticism, bombastic basement show ethos, the far reaches of post-hippie underground esoterica, and making the gallery world scratch their heads instead of their chins.
In January of 2023, Sunburned gathered for a wintery week of sessions at Big Blue, Adam Langellottiâs studio/house in Turnerâs Falls, MA. With the cozy setting and Sunburnedâs nature, it was a family affair, with members dropping in and out, cooking meals, going through old photos, making beer runs. The current Sunburned core was there, while Michael Josef K and Matt Krefting were back in the mix after years away, and Sarah Gibbons was making her proper recorded debut.
Plus, original member Phil Franklin was back in the States after three years of travel restrictions from his current home in Australia. Sunburned fans might know Franklinâs Mint, Philâs song-oriented project that involves other Sunburneds as musicians, mixing original compositions with covers. On "Nimbus", heâs got one of each, as the Mint gets folded into the larger band. âIshkabibble Magooâ is a jaunty earworm of the highest caliber, weaving hilarious, ingenious wordplay into an infectious melody. And the coded etymology of the title is hard to beatââIshkabibbleâ can mean âDonât worry,â while âMagooâ can refer to someone whoâs overly wholesome. So, like, who cares, square? On âLily Thin,â Franklin leads a cover of the Sun City Girlsâ âCruel & Thin,â itself a re-working of âLeĂŻli Twilâ by Younes Megri. Itâs all campfire flicker and smoke, featuring a stately organ solo from P.G. Six thatâs nothing short of miraculous.
Then there are the readings. Sunburned is no stranger to the spoken word. Impromptu rants and missives are common. They backed the legendary poet Ira Cohen during performances in the early 2000s. Agony interspersed jams with readings. On last yearâs Hypnotape, band members read from a stack of books passed around the studio. But something about the spoken word pieces on "Nimbus" feels different.
As the record begins, atop a delicate bedding of Shannon Ketchâs sequenced synthesizer pulses, Sarah Gibbonsâ meandering Mellotron, and the twinkle of bells, the poet Peter Gizzi intones the word âNimbus.â Heâs naming the poem heâs about to read, the record youâre about to hear, describing the music Sunburned makes. âItâs so random becoming a self,â he reflects, the words confessional and ghostly, the voice urgent and tender. Gizziâs a newer member of the Sunburned orbit, but has been a serious presence at recent live shows.
The bulk of the LPâs second side consists of two longer poetry-based pieces. âConsider the Woundâ is Gizziâs again. The music is darker, the reading more punctuated and pointed. Gizzi rides the syllables, following the words up and down their scales, then slamming the brakes for blunt statements. The band is fuller here, looser, more churning. More than just words over music, itâs an emotionally wrenching experience. The album closer, âHilltop Garden Lament,â is a funereal thump, with Matt Krefting reading this time. His voice is full of playful, deadpan beatnik violence while the instruments (acoustic guitars, drums, various keyboards) swirl in a witchy invocation. Itâs fun to play in the dark.
Bolting the components together are a series of instrumental fantasias. âThe Lollygaggerâ is a funky, dreamy groove from John Moloney, Michael K, and Rob Thomas, with charging, chiming synths from Taylor Richardson, Ketch, and Conrad Capistran leading the way to the battlefield. On âBrainticket,â Gibbonsâ vocals recall the haunt of A.C. Marias or âMelody Laughterâ-era Nico, and Ron Schneidermanâs bright golden guitar sounds like a honeyslide from heaven. âWalker Talkerâ highlights the hot-tar-heat-stroke of Jeremy Pisaniâs guitar while the Mellotron, helmed by Capistran this time (Sunburned shares their toys), comments with cloudlike splendor.
As with all Sunburned records, the compositions were done on the fly. Gizzi rolled up and busted out his manuscript for "Fierce Elegy" (Wesleyan Press), then still unreleased. Krefting read spontaneously from a pile of his notebooks. Franklin had âIshkabibble Magooâ in his back pocket, but no one expected it and Gibbons unraveled harmonies in real time. If the setting is right, magic will happen. And so, this record.
For the cover art, Sunburned pulled another master into orbit. Video and installation artist and David Bowie collaborator Tony Oursler lent an image of his multimedia sculpture âSpEcTrUm,â a collage of digital chaos within the silhouette of a haloed, meditating figure. The image perfectly evokes the aura of the record, and the band itself. Thereâs no unifying theory of Sunburned, nor should there be. There isnât even a notion of forward momentum. There is only time as a liquid property, looping and infinite. It is truly a nimbus, an atmosphere, a bright and golden disk investing a group of humans, a cloud so full it can only bring forth rain.
Donât be a square!Â
Three Lobed and Sunburned Hand of the Man have a long history. The label has been releasing the groupâs output for nearly two of its three decades of making music. As Sunburned has picked up momentum again in recent years, the labelâs been right there, releasing the highly acclaimed "Pick a Day to Die" in 2020, and in late 2022 reissuing a 20th anniversary edition of "Headdress", the classic and confounding first Sunburned LP. Label head Cory Rayborn acted as the catalyst for storyteller Kelly Davis to assemble "No Way Out", an astonishing eight-part oral history podcast released by Aquarium Drunkard in 2023. It was a free-wheeling kaleidoscope of a project, mirroring the bandâs own elusiveness and flux. Sunburned life was related, analyzed, mythologized, dissected, and obfuscated.
The podcast caught some key points. At its core Sunburned is both a familial and mercurial entity. Thereâs not a fixed lineup, yet those within its borders are fervently committed. Thereâs not so much a consistent sound as a spiritual throughline, straddling god-loves-a-drunk mysticism, bombastic basement show ethos, the far reaches of post-hippie underground esoterica, and making the gallery world scratch their heads instead of their chins.
In January of 2023, Sunburned gathered for a wintery week of sessions at Big Blue, Adam Langellottiâs studio/house in Turnerâs Falls, MA. With the cozy setting and Sunburnedâs nature, it was a family affair, with members dropping in and out, cooking meals, going through old photos, making beer runs. The current Sunburned core was there, while Michael Josef K and Matt Krefting were back in the mix after years away, and Sarah Gibbons was making her proper recorded debut.
Plus, original member Phil Franklin was back in the States after three years of travel restrictions from his current home in Australia. Sunburned fans might know Franklinâs Mint, Philâs song-oriented project that involves other Sunburneds as musicians, mixing original compositions with covers. On "Nimbus", heâs got one of each, as the Mint gets folded into the larger band. âIshkabibble Magooâ is a jaunty earworm of the highest caliber, weaving hilarious, ingenious wordplay into an infectious melody. And the coded etymology of the title is hard to beatââIshkabibbleâ can mean âDonât worry,â while âMagooâ can refer to someone whoâs overly wholesome. So, like, who cares, square? On âLily Thin,â Franklin leads a cover of the Sun City Girlsâ âCruel & Thin,â itself a re-working of âLeĂŻli Twilâ by Younes Megri. Itâs all campfire flicker and smoke, featuring a stately organ solo from P.G. Six thatâs nothing short of miraculous.
Then there are the readings. Sunburned is no stranger to the spoken word. Impromptu rants and missives are common. They backed the legendary poet Ira Cohen during performances in the early 2000s. Agony interspersed jams with readings. On last yearâs Hypnotape, band members read from a stack of books passed around the studio. But something about the spoken word pieces on "Nimbus" feels different.
As the record begins, atop a delicate bedding of Shannon Ketchâs sequenced synthesizer pulses, Sarah Gibbonsâ meandering Mellotron, and the twinkle of bells, the poet Peter Gizzi intones the word âNimbus.â Heâs naming the poem heâs about to read, the record youâre about to hear, describing the music Sunburned makes. âItâs so random becoming a self,â he reflects, the words confessional and ghostly, the voice urgent and tender. Gizziâs a newer member of the Sunburned orbit, but has been a serious presence at recent live shows.
The bulk of the LPâs second side consists of two longer poetry-based pieces. âConsider the Woundâ is Gizziâs again. The music is darker, the reading more punctuated and pointed. Gizzi rides the syllables, following the words up and down their scales, then slamming the brakes for blunt statements. The band is fuller here, looser, more churning. More than just words over music, itâs an emotionally wrenching experience. The album closer, âHilltop Garden Lament,â is a funereal thump, with Matt Krefting reading this time. His voice is full of playful, deadpan beatnik violence while the instruments (acoustic guitars, drums, various keyboards) swirl in a witchy invocation. Itâs fun to play in the dark.
Bolting the components together are a series of instrumental fantasias. âThe Lollygaggerâ is a funky, dreamy groove from John Moloney, Michael K, and Rob Thomas, with charging, chiming synths from Taylor Richardson, Ketch, and Conrad Capistran leading the way to the battlefield. On âBrainticket,â Gibbonsâ vocals recall the haunt of A.C. Marias or âMelody Laughterâ-era Nico, and Ron Schneidermanâs bright golden guitar sounds like a honeyslide from heaven. âWalker Talkerâ highlights the hot-tar-heat-stroke of Jeremy Pisaniâs guitar while the Mellotron, helmed by Capistran this time (Sunburned shares their toys), comments with cloudlike splendor.
As with all Sunburned records, the compositions were done on the fly. Gizzi rolled up and busted out his manuscript for "Fierce Elegy" (Wesleyan Press), then still unreleased. Krefting read spontaneously from a pile of his notebooks. Franklin had âIshkabibble Magooâ in his back pocket, but no one expected it and Gibbons unraveled harmonies in real time. If the setting is right, magic will happen. And so, this record.
For the cover art, Sunburned pulled another master into orbit. Video and installation artist and David Bowie collaborator Tony Oursler lent an image of his multimedia sculpture âSpEcTrUm,â a collage of digital chaos within the silhouette of a haloed, meditating figure. The image perfectly evokes the aura of the record, and the band itself. Thereâs no unifying theory of Sunburned, nor should there be. There isnât even a notion of forward momentum. There is only time as a liquid property, looping and infinite. It is truly a nimbus, an atmosphere, a bright and golden disk investing a group of humans, a cloud so full it can only bring forth rain.
Donât be a square!Â
The podcast caught some key points. At its core Sunburned is both a familial and mercurial entity. Thereâs not a fixed lineup, yet those within its borders are fervently committed. Thereâs not so much a consistent sound as a spiritual throughline, straddling god-loves-a-drunk mysticism, bombastic basement show ethos, the far reaches of post-hippie underground esoterica, and making the gallery world scratch their heads instead of their chins.
In January of 2023, Sunburned gathered for a wintery week of sessions at Big Blue, Adam Langellottiâs studio/house in Turnerâs Falls, MA. With the cozy setting and Sunburnedâs nature, it was a family affair, with members dropping in and out, cooking meals, going through old photos, making beer runs. The current Sunburned core was there, while Michael Josef K and Matt Krefting were back in the mix after years away, and Sarah Gibbons was making her proper recorded debut.
Plus, original member Phil Franklin was back in the States after three years of travel restrictions from his current home in Australia. Sunburned fans might know Franklinâs Mint, Philâs song-oriented project that involves other Sunburneds as musicians, mixing original compositions with covers. On "Nimbus", heâs got one of each, as the Mint gets folded into the larger band. âIshkabibble Magooâ is a jaunty earworm of the highest caliber, weaving hilarious, ingenious wordplay into an infectious melody. And the coded etymology of the title is hard to beatââIshkabibbleâ can mean âDonât worry,â while âMagooâ can refer to someone whoâs overly wholesome. So, like, who cares, square? On âLily Thin,â Franklin leads a cover of the Sun City Girlsâ âCruel & Thin,â itself a re-working of âLeĂŻli Twilâ by Younes Megri. Itâs all campfire flicker and smoke, featuring a stately organ solo from P.G. Six thatâs nothing short of miraculous.
Then there are the readings. Sunburned is no stranger to the spoken word. Impromptu rants and missives are common. They backed the legendary poet Ira Cohen during performances in the early 2000s. Agony interspersed jams with readings. On last yearâs Hypnotape, band members read from a stack of books passed around the studio. But something about the spoken word pieces on "Nimbus" feels different.
As the record begins, atop a delicate bedding of Shannon Ketchâs sequenced synthesizer pulses, Sarah Gibbonsâ meandering Mellotron, and the twinkle of bells, the poet Peter Gizzi intones the word âNimbus.â Heâs naming the poem heâs about to read, the record youâre about to hear, describing the music Sunburned makes. âItâs so random becoming a self,â he reflects, the words confessional and ghostly, the voice urgent and tender. Gizziâs a newer member of the Sunburned orbit, but has been a serious presence at recent live shows.
The bulk of the LPâs second side consists of two longer poetry-based pieces. âConsider the Woundâ is Gizziâs again. The music is darker, the reading more punctuated and pointed. Gizzi rides the syllables, following the words up and down their scales, then slamming the brakes for blunt statements. The band is fuller here, looser, more churning. More than just words over music, itâs an emotionally wrenching experience. The album closer, âHilltop Garden Lament,â is a funereal thump, with Matt Krefting reading this time. His voice is full of playful, deadpan beatnik violence while the instruments (acoustic guitars, drums, various keyboards) swirl in a witchy invocation. Itâs fun to play in the dark.
Bolting the components together are a series of instrumental fantasias. âThe Lollygaggerâ is a funky, dreamy groove from John Moloney, Michael K, and Rob Thomas, with charging, chiming synths from Taylor Richardson, Ketch, and Conrad Capistran leading the way to the battlefield. On âBrainticket,â Gibbonsâ vocals recall the haunt of A.C. Marias or âMelody Laughterâ-era Nico, and Ron Schneidermanâs bright golden guitar sounds like a honeyslide from heaven. âWalker Talkerâ highlights the hot-tar-heat-stroke of Jeremy Pisaniâs guitar while the Mellotron, helmed by Capistran this time (Sunburned shares their toys), comments with cloudlike splendor.
As with all Sunburned records, the compositions were done on the fly. Gizzi rolled up and busted out his manuscript for "Fierce Elegy" (Wesleyan Press), then still unreleased. Krefting read spontaneously from a pile of his notebooks. Franklin had âIshkabibble Magooâ in his back pocket, but no one expected it and Gibbons unraveled harmonies in real time. If the setting is right, magic will happen. And so, this record.
For the cover art, Sunburned pulled another master into orbit. Video and installation artist and David Bowie collaborator Tony Oursler lent an image of his multimedia sculpture âSpEcTrUm,â a collage of digital chaos within the silhouette of a haloed, meditating figure. The image perfectly evokes the aura of the record, and the band itself. Thereâs no unifying theory of Sunburned, nor should there be. There isnât even a notion of forward momentum. There is only time as a liquid property, looping and infinite. It is truly a nimbus, an atmosphere, a bright and golden disk investing a group of humans, a cloud so full it can only bring forth rain.
Donât be a square!Â
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Three Lobed and Sunburned Hand of the Man have a long history. The label has been releasing the groupâs output for nearly two of its three decades of making music. As Sunburned has picked up momentum again in recent years, the labelâs been right there, releasing the highly acclaimed "Pick a Day to Die" in 2020, and in late 2022 reissuing a 20th anniversary edition of "Headdress", the classic and confounding first Sunburned LP. Label head Cory Rayborn acted as the catalyst for storyteller Kelly Davis to assemble "No Way Out", an astonishing eight-part oral history podcast released by Aquarium Drunkard in 2023. It was a free-wheeling kaleidoscope of a project, mirroring the bandâs own elusiveness and flux. Sunburned life was related, analyzed, mythologized, dissected, and obfuscated.
The podcast caught some key points. At its core Sunburned is both a familial and mercurial entity. Thereâs not a fixed lineup, yet those within its borders are fervently committed. Thereâs not so much a consistent sound as a spiritual throughline, straddling god-loves-a-drunk mysticism, bombastic basement show ethos, the far reaches of post-hippie underground esoterica, and making the gallery world scratch their heads instead of their chins.
In January of 2023, Sunburned gathered for a wintery week of sessions at Big Blue, Adam Langellottiâs studio/house in Turnerâs Falls, MA. With the cozy setting and Sunburnedâs nature, it was a family affair, with members dropping in and out, cooking meals, going through old photos, making beer runs. The current Sunburned core was there, while Michael Josef K and Matt Krefting were back in the mix after years away, and Sarah Gibbons was making her proper recorded debut.
Plus, original member Phil Franklin was back in the States after three years of travel restrictions from his current home in Australia. Sunburned fans might know Franklinâs Mint, Philâs song-oriented project that involves other Sunburneds as musicians, mixing original compositions with covers. On "Nimbus", heâs got one of each, as the Mint gets folded into the larger band. âIshkabibble Magooâ is a jaunty earworm of the highest caliber, weaving hilarious, ingenious wordplay into an infectious melody. And the coded etymology of the title is hard to beatââIshkabibbleâ can mean âDonât worry,â while âMagooâ can refer to someone whoâs overly wholesome. So, like, who cares, square? On âLily Thin,â Franklin leads a cover of the Sun City Girlsâ âCruel & Thin,â itself a re-working of âLeĂŻli Twilâ by Younes Megri. Itâs all campfire flicker and smoke, featuring a stately organ solo from P.G. Six thatâs nothing short of miraculous.
Then there are the readings. Sunburned is no stranger to the spoken word. Impromptu rants and missives are common. They backed the legendary poet Ira Cohen during performances in the early 2000s. Agony interspersed jams with readings. On last yearâs Hypnotape, band members read from a stack of books passed around the studio. But something about the spoken word pieces on "Nimbus" feels different.
As the record begins, atop a delicate bedding of Shannon Ketchâs sequenced synthesizer pulses, Sarah Gibbonsâ meandering Mellotron, and the twinkle of bells, the poet Peter Gizzi intones the word âNimbus.â Heâs naming the poem heâs about to read, the record youâre about to hear, describing the music Sunburned makes. âItâs so random becoming a self,â he reflects, the words confessional and ghostly, the voice urgent and tender. Gizziâs a newer member of the Sunburned orbit, but has been a serious presence at recent live shows.
The bulk of the LPâs second side consists of two longer poetry-based pieces. âConsider the Woundâ is Gizziâs again. The music is darker, the reading more punctuated and pointed. Gizzi rides the syllables, following the words up and down their scales, then slamming the brakes for blunt statements. The band is fuller here, looser, more churning. More than just words over music, itâs an emotionally wrenching experience. The album closer, âHilltop Garden Lament,â is a funereal thump, with Matt Krefting reading this time. His voice is full of playful, deadpan beatnik violence while the instruments (acoustic guitars, drums, various keyboards) swirl in a witchy invocation. Itâs fun to play in the dark.
Bolting the components together are a series of instrumental fantasias. âThe Lollygaggerâ is a funky, dreamy groove from John Moloney, Michael K, and Rob Thomas, with charging, chiming synths from Taylor Richardson, Ketch, and Conrad Capistran leading the way to the battlefield. On âBrainticket,â Gibbonsâ vocals recall the haunt of A.C. Marias or âMelody Laughterâ-era Nico, and Ron Schneidermanâs bright golden guitar sounds like a honeyslide from heaven. âWalker Talkerâ highlights the hot-tar-heat-stroke of Jeremy Pisaniâs guitar while the Mellotron, helmed by Capistran this time (Sunburned shares their toys), comments with cloudlike splendor.
As with all Sunburned records, the compositions were done on the fly. Gizzi rolled up and busted out his manuscript for "Fierce Elegy" (Wesleyan Press), then still unreleased. Krefting read spontaneously from a pile of his notebooks. Franklin had âIshkabibble Magooâ in his back pocket, but no one expected it and Gibbons unraveled harmonies in real time. If the setting is right, magic will happen. And so, this record.
For the cover art, Sunburned pulled another master into orbit. Video and installation artist and David Bowie collaborator Tony Oursler lent an image of his multimedia sculpture âSpEcTrUm,â a collage of digital chaos within the silhouette of a haloed, meditating figure. The image perfectly evokes the aura of the record, and the band itself. Thereâs no unifying theory of Sunburned, nor should there be. There isnât even a notion of forward momentum. There is only time as a liquid property, looping and infinite. It is truly a nimbus, an atmosphere, a bright and golden disk investing a group of humans, a cloud so full it can only bring forth rain.
Donât be a square!Â
The podcast caught some key points. At its core Sunburned is both a familial and mercurial entity. Thereâs not a fixed lineup, yet those within its borders are fervently committed. Thereâs not so much a consistent sound as a spiritual throughline, straddling god-loves-a-drunk mysticism, bombastic basement show ethos, the far reaches of post-hippie underground esoterica, and making the gallery world scratch their heads instead of their chins.
In January of 2023, Sunburned gathered for a wintery week of sessions at Big Blue, Adam Langellottiâs studio/house in Turnerâs Falls, MA. With the cozy setting and Sunburnedâs nature, it was a family affair, with members dropping in and out, cooking meals, going through old photos, making beer runs. The current Sunburned core was there, while Michael Josef K and Matt Krefting were back in the mix after years away, and Sarah Gibbons was making her proper recorded debut.
Plus, original member Phil Franklin was back in the States after three years of travel restrictions from his current home in Australia. Sunburned fans might know Franklinâs Mint, Philâs song-oriented project that involves other Sunburneds as musicians, mixing original compositions with covers. On "Nimbus", heâs got one of each, as the Mint gets folded into the larger band. âIshkabibble Magooâ is a jaunty earworm of the highest caliber, weaving hilarious, ingenious wordplay into an infectious melody. And the coded etymology of the title is hard to beatââIshkabibbleâ can mean âDonât worry,â while âMagooâ can refer to someone whoâs overly wholesome. So, like, who cares, square? On âLily Thin,â Franklin leads a cover of the Sun City Girlsâ âCruel & Thin,â itself a re-working of âLeĂŻli Twilâ by Younes Megri. Itâs all campfire flicker and smoke, featuring a stately organ solo from P.G. Six thatâs nothing short of miraculous.
Then there are the readings. Sunburned is no stranger to the spoken word. Impromptu rants and missives are common. They backed the legendary poet Ira Cohen during performances in the early 2000s. Agony interspersed jams with readings. On last yearâs Hypnotape, band members read from a stack of books passed around the studio. But something about the spoken word pieces on "Nimbus" feels different.
As the record begins, atop a delicate bedding of Shannon Ketchâs sequenced synthesizer pulses, Sarah Gibbonsâ meandering Mellotron, and the twinkle of bells, the poet Peter Gizzi intones the word âNimbus.â Heâs naming the poem heâs about to read, the record youâre about to hear, describing the music Sunburned makes. âItâs so random becoming a self,â he reflects, the words confessional and ghostly, the voice urgent and tender. Gizziâs a newer member of the Sunburned orbit, but has been a serious presence at recent live shows.
The bulk of the LPâs second side consists of two longer poetry-based pieces. âConsider the Woundâ is Gizziâs again. The music is darker, the reading more punctuated and pointed. Gizzi rides the syllables, following the words up and down their scales, then slamming the brakes for blunt statements. The band is fuller here, looser, more churning. More than just words over music, itâs an emotionally wrenching experience. The album closer, âHilltop Garden Lament,â is a funereal thump, with Matt Krefting reading this time. His voice is full of playful, deadpan beatnik violence while the instruments (acoustic guitars, drums, various keyboards) swirl in a witchy invocation. Itâs fun to play in the dark.
Bolting the components together are a series of instrumental fantasias. âThe Lollygaggerâ is a funky, dreamy groove from John Moloney, Michael K, and Rob Thomas, with charging, chiming synths from Taylor Richardson, Ketch, and Conrad Capistran leading the way to the battlefield. On âBrainticket,â Gibbonsâ vocals recall the haunt of A.C. Marias or âMelody Laughterâ-era Nico, and Ron Schneidermanâs bright golden guitar sounds like a honeyslide from heaven. âWalker Talkerâ highlights the hot-tar-heat-stroke of Jeremy Pisaniâs guitar while the Mellotron, helmed by Capistran this time (Sunburned shares their toys), comments with cloudlike splendor.
As with all Sunburned records, the compositions were done on the fly. Gizzi rolled up and busted out his manuscript for "Fierce Elegy" (Wesleyan Press), then still unreleased. Krefting read spontaneously from a pile of his notebooks. Franklin had âIshkabibble Magooâ in his back pocket, but no one expected it and Gibbons unraveled harmonies in real time. If the setting is right, magic will happen. And so, this record.
For the cover art, Sunburned pulled another master into orbit. Video and installation artist and David Bowie collaborator Tony Oursler lent an image of his multimedia sculpture âSpEcTrUm,â a collage of digital chaos within the silhouette of a haloed, meditating figure. The image perfectly evokes the aura of the record, and the band itself. Thereâs no unifying theory of Sunburned, nor should there be. There isnât even a notion of forward momentum. There is only time as a liquid property, looping and infinite. It is truly a nimbus, an atmosphere, a bright and golden disk investing a group of humans, a cloud so full it can only bring forth rain.
Donât be a square!Â











