MJ Guider - Sour Cherry Bell (2020) [Hi-Res]

Artist: MJ Guider
Title: Sour Cherry Bell
Year Of Release: 2020
Label: kranky
Genre: Ambient Pop, Shoegaze, Ethereal
Quality: Mp3 320 kbps / FLAC (tracks) / 24bit-44.1kHz FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 45:05
Total Size: 103 / 265 / 494 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:Title: Sour Cherry Bell
Year Of Release: 2020
Label: kranky
Genre: Ambient Pop, Shoegaze, Ethereal
Quality: Mp3 320 kbps / FLAC (tracks) / 24bit-44.1kHz FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 45:05
Total Size: 103 / 265 / 494 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
01. Lowlight (02:43)
02. The Steelyard (05:07)
03. FM Secure (04:05)
04. Cherry Bell Blacktop (03:23)
05. Body Optics (07:03)
06. Quiet Time (05:23)
07. Simulus (04:51)
08. Perfect Interference (03:11)
09. Sourbell (04:41)
10. Petrechoria (04:38)
Melissa Guion’s second offering for Kranky retains the glassy gauze of her debut, 2016’s Precious Systems, but shaded starker and darker, framed by mechanical rhythms and humid industrial moods. She speaks of Sour Cherry Bell as something of a reckoning with her tools of creation: “I was curious to see how far I could go with them, even if that meant reaching the ends of their capacity to do what I wanted. But I never exhausted them and they never exhausted me.”
Utilizing her trusted combination of instrumentation, Guion tracked the record between her New Orleans home and rehearsal space, capturing chemistries both intimate and expansive. The songs sway between twilit shoegaze, downer ballads, and gothic pop, mapping a delicate palette of electric melancholies, though in retrospect she cites as her primary muse the notion of power: “lost and found, corporeal and cerebral, harnessed and exploited, of one and many, in this reality and the next.” Sour Cherry Bell reverberates beyond the here and now into scenes unseen, worlds unheard.
Utilizing her trusted combination of instrumentation, Guion tracked the record between her New Orleans home and rehearsal space, capturing chemistries both intimate and expansive. The songs sway between twilit shoegaze, downer ballads, and gothic pop, mapping a delicate palette of electric melancholies, though in retrospect she cites as her primary muse the notion of power: “lost and found, corporeal and cerebral, harnessed and exploited, of one and many, in this reality and the next.” Sour Cherry Bell reverberates beyond the here and now into scenes unseen, worlds unheard.