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Ganser—Just Look At That Sky

Felte Records, Jul. 20

Ganser—Just Look At That Sky

July 29, 2020

Just Look At That Sky is well-served by its own simplicity. Simplicity here doesn’t mean complacence; Ganser’s spirited performances are anything but. Instead, it speaks to a nailing of the fundamentals; a non-exclusive prioritisation of assurance over ambition, and a rare but very welcome clarity of purpose. And let’s be honest: when many people describe an album as “ambitious”, what they really mean is “expensive-sounding” anyway. Here simplicity provides a space which Ganser fill with their gusto, charm and technical expertise.

The band serve up—with Devo-like precision—a powerfully-delivered medley of fist-pumping post-punk hits, shot through with naked brutality, and peppered with deft experimental touches. Melodies are consciously simple, sustained by vocalist Nadia Garofalo’s easy charisma and gravelly timbre. They benefit too from a stable guitar tone and an unfussy, clear mix. Compositions consequently feel much more complex and dynamic than they actually are; essentially, you can keep track of everything at the same time as it’s blowing your mind.

Withholding so much actually requires more courage than a maximalist approach. Ganser are confident enough in the success of their ideas not to try and dilute or disguise them. Far more touching in practice than bands who blast platitudes from megaphones are ones who feel as though they are conferring a secret directly into your ear. Ganser have the wisdom to distinguish impact from amplification; power from noise. That’s probably how they manage to wring so much enjoyment from an album which sounds like it was recorded in a hyperbaric chamber the size of a caravan.

If all this makes Just Look At That Sky sound one-note, it’s not. There is a lot of diversity to be found throughout the album. A late explosion of sunshine in the tracklist, ‘[NO YES]’, garnishes its bright instrumental hook with samples from a vintage interview. The track works beautifully; think the early (good) work of Public Service Broadcasting, or a less frightening My Life in the Bush of Ghosts.

On the less breezy side is ‘Projector’, a lean track propelled by Alicia Gaines’ beefy bass. The track is surprisingly dark; brunt-treacle-y enough to have sat on Savages’ debut, Silence Yourself. Garofalo even channels the quasi-cabaret delivery of ex-Savages vocalist Jehnny Beth. Yet another contrasting mood immediately follows ‘Projector’, as ‘Emergency Equipment and Exits’ flips the script into jubilant new-wave territory with an instrumental as lush as any in Echo & the Bunnymen’s catalogue. (And bonus points: it doesn’t even come off in a cringe, Stranger-Things sort of way like these things often can.)

That so many very different tracks can invisibly share space is testament to Ganser’s gentle touch. Nothing is jarring on this album—but almost everything is surprising. Ganser constantly push, but do not shove. As kind people speak through deeds, not words, talented musicians never scream proclamations of their own talent, but commit to their craft. Ganser seem intimately aware of their own strengths and musical proclivities and, with single-minded and admirable determination, have channelled them into a hugely enjoyable album.

Just Look At That Sky is available for purchase and streaming here.

Words: Andrew O’Keefe

In Review Tags Post punk, No-wave
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Swans — Leaving Meaning

Young God, Oct. 2019

Swans — Leaving Meaning

October 29, 2019

Since their 1983 debut, Filth, Swans have reinvented themselves more than perhaps any other band. Frontman Michael Gira has rallied multiple line-ups through multiple decades. The band has explored punishing no-wave, gothic country, and transcendent post-rock. But what has always remained consistent are Swans' themes of violence, power, lust and religion.

Leaving Meaning retains these themes, but scales back the bombast that post-reunion Swans have come to embody. Don't get it twisted: the album still, at points, sounds gargantuan. 'Sunfucker' is a vast and brutal track which could go toe-to-toe with any of the band's most extreme. But it's blessed with the delicacy of Gira's side-project, The Angels of Light.

Leaving Meaning is a more reflective and personal album than its immediate predecessors, too. Gira focuses on transitioning between life and death, rising to the face of God in his old age. 'Amnesia', a classic Swans track, has been re-recorded to stunning effect. Lyrics are, for the first time in decades, specific and scrutable — but they are being delivered by an older and wiser voice. The album is soaked in the past, but squinting at an uncertain future.

Likely to lose Swans some of their post-reunion fans, this album may end up a victim of its own subtlety. It imposes very little, with a greatly reduced focus on crescendos, riffs and walls of noise. But far from a deliberate rejection of these facets, Leaving Meaning is another evolution from a band whose history is defined by them. And it can proudly cap one of the most colourful contemporary discographies in the Western canon.


Leaving Meaning is available to purchase here.

Words by Andrew O’Keefe

Swans new album, leaving meaning., will be released worldwide October 25th, 2019 on Young God Records/Mute. Formats include 2X LP, 2CD, as well as download and stream. "It's Coming It's Real" features choral vocals by Anna and Maria von Hausswolff. Pre-order signed copies through Young God Records - http://bit.ly/2lFLeTq Everywhere else - http://smarturl.it/SWANS-LM Swans will tour in 2020.

In Review Tags Post-rock, Southern Gothic, No-wave
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Girl Band — The Talkies

Rough Trade, Sep. 2019

Girl Band — The Talkies

October 6, 2019

The tyranny of genre-tagging stuffs Girl Band in a pigeonhole of 'noise rock'. The Talkies and its predecessor Holding Hands With Jamie are both, yes, noisy. But they're erratic and amorphous too, and draw in so many mismatched influences you'd get arthritis listing them out. Somehow, The Talkies transcends these influences. The tried-and-tested music pundit schtick (it's x meets y, but on crack/acid/speed) is left thumb-twiddling. If Pete Townsend is to be believed, and originality is now impossible, Girl Band fake it like no one else.

Performances across the board deploy force with admirable control. The album is substantive and restrained — more so than it first appears. Songs' form often assumes a slow build. Tension increases and sustains to a point of cacophonous release. This may happen a few too many times, but it more often gives the material legs than functioning as a crutch.

And deviations from this form are heightened by their brevity and scarcity. The album's few noodling act breaks entertain without disrupting its thudding momentum.

Now for the elephant in the room. Girl Band return, revived, after an extended period of inactivity. Poor health has prohibited gigging, postponed studio recording, and given rise to legends and infamy that dog frontman Dara Kiely. There is something worth remembering, particularly in the months following Daniel Johnston's death. Suffering obstructs the creation of art. Suffering paralyses the artist.

Some corners host a sociopathic misconception: outsider artists must suffer. When a band occupies discomforting spaces, we should not get the popcorn in for its self-annihilation. 'Could Kiely be this decade's Richey Edwards? Is he troubled enough?' This amounts to nothing but a cynical, indie-rock cover of paps snapping Britney's slaphead. But the joke's on the journos — The Talkies is the sound of a boundary-busting band in total control of their material. And it’s material that’ll deafen anyone to chatter that surrounds it.

Girl Band's new album 'The Talkies' is Out Now on Rough Trade Records, listen here: http://girlband.ffm.to/thetalkies Directed and produced by Bob Gallagher Featuring Bryan Quinn & MJ O'Sullivan Production Manager - Louise Murphy Director of Photography - Evan Barry Production Designer - Sinead O'Reilly Edited by - Kevin Herlihy at

The Talkies is available for purchase here.

Words by Andrew O’Keefe

In Review Tags Noise rock, Industrial rock, No-wave