Friday, 21 May 2010

PLANTMAN/NEON HARVEST – SPLIT SINGLE (CULTURE AS A DARE)


PLANTMAN/NEON HARVEST – SPLIT SINGLE (CULTURE AS A DARE)

I hope I never live to see the day where labels are no longer releasing split seven inches.  This is the king of formats, the kind of release that should exist the beginning of every serious band’s career and appear at the beginning of every indie label’s catalogue as their single digit releases.

Plantman are a hazy lo-fi outfit whose lyrics resemble more throwaway observations than poetic couplets (in a good way).  In execution the band sound very much like Yo La Tengo offering dubious promise of better things while exhibiting some kind of summertime nostalgia.  There is a distinctly bright and sunny tone attached to proceedings and swiftly the band is soon done demonstrating an access to a better state of mind.  In execution “The Tide” acts like a comforting breeze.

Elsewhere is Neon Harvest who remind me of Granddaddy with their drum machine based wailings that pulse in a lo-fi order with a threat and promise of ripping through the orchestration at any moment with their beards.  This song sounds like it is being delivered in an altered state, right at the eye of a very nasty storm.  Destructive and disturbing this is not necessarily cleansing to the soul.  Eventually it rolls out sounding like Steven Malkmus doing a mantra with a drum machine beat that could easily double as the sound of a ticking bomb.  Pretty unnerving ultimately.

I like this seven inch, it gives me pleasure.

Thesaurus moment: chill.

Culture As A Dare

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