Silver Dapple - Moody Boots (2018)

Artist: Silver Dapple
Title: Moody Boots
Year Of Release: 2018
Label: Silver Dapple
Genre: Indie Pop, Indie Rock, Shoegaze, Dream Pop, Post-Punk
Quality: Mp3 320 kbps / FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 31:59 min
Total Size: 76 / 200 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:Title: Moody Boots
Year Of Release: 2018
Label: Silver Dapple
Genre: Indie Pop, Indie Rock, Shoegaze, Dream Pop, Post-Punk
Quality: Mp3 320 kbps / FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 31:59 min
Total Size: 76 / 200 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
01. Intuables
02. Vibration
03. Magique
04. Tiens Ma Main
05. Pines
06. Valley
07. January
08. Hallo
09. Bedlife
10. New York
11. Friday Night
Following their well-received debut LP English Girlfriend back in 2011, Montreal’s Silver Dapple has finally returned with their sophomore LP, Moody Boots.
The recent addition of vocalist / guitarist Melissa Di Menna has expanded the band’s sound, with her vocals intermingling with singer / guitarist Emily Deimert in very effective ways. The pair play off each other throughout Moody Boots, which alternates between dreamy pop soundscapes and dark, driving post-punk (often in the same song).
Backed by a powerful rhythm section (drummer Julien Bakvis and bassist Markus Lake), the band weave through a number of styles here, from the pounding, JAMC-sounding first single “Vibration,” to the hazy shimmer of “January.”
Filled with some truly catchy earworms and enough stylistic changes to keep things interesting, Moody Boots is an eminently re-listenable album that might just be this summer’s soundtrack.
The recent addition of vocalist / guitarist Melissa Di Menna has expanded the band’s sound, with her vocals intermingling with singer / guitarist Emily Deimert in very effective ways. The pair play off each other throughout Moody Boots, which alternates between dreamy pop soundscapes and dark, driving post-punk (often in the same song).
Backed by a powerful rhythm section (drummer Julien Bakvis and bassist Markus Lake), the band weave through a number of styles here, from the pounding, JAMC-sounding first single “Vibration,” to the hazy shimmer of “January.”
Filled with some truly catchy earworms and enough stylistic changes to keep things interesting, Moody Boots is an eminently re-listenable album that might just be this summer’s soundtrack.