Breathless - See Those Colours Fly (2022)

  • 28 Jul, 16:17
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Artist:
Title: See Those Colours Fly
Year Of Release: 2022
Label: Tenor Vossa Records
Genre: Post-Punk, Shoegaze
Quality: 320 kbps | FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 00:45:28
Total Size: 104 mb | 251 mb
WebSite:

Tracklist:

01. Breathless - Looking for the Words
02. Breathless - The Party's Not Over
03. Breathless - My Heart and I
04. Breathless - We Should Go Driving
05. Breathless - Let Me Down Gently
06. Breathless - The City Never Sleeps
07. Breathless - Somewhere out of Reach
08. Breathless - So Far from Love
09. Breathless - I Watch You Sleep

Dreamlike and Hallucinogenic, a hazy luminosity billows from every pore of Breathless' forthcoming album See Those Colours Fly. The music of Dream-Pop Melancholics, Breathless has never been the sort to be hurried - after all, See Those Colours Fly, mixed by Kramer, is only their third new release this century. But while progress on the group's eighth album was unavoidably delayed by a stroke of cruel misfortune - not to mention the realities of the global pandemic - the finished work is one of their finest, brimming with melody, transfigured by its long period of gestation and the changes fate imposed on their creative process. "Three days before we were due to go into the studio our drummer, Tristram, was involved in a serious car accident," says bassist Ari Neufeld. "He was in a coma, and we didn't know if he was going to live or die. We were all really shaken by the experience but decided to carry on writing and rehearsing the other songs for the album, as we had no idea what the outcome would be" A founder member, one of only two drummers to play with the group since they formed in 1983, Tristram Latimer Sayer's absence from See Those Colours Fly marks a profound break in tradition for Breathless. But the path they were compelled to take, helped shape their new album's bold sound, with its floating layers and ghostly drones, like fragments of half remembered dreams, all adding to its huge sense of space. Rhythms on the album take the form of drum parts programmed by Ari who jokes that she was "forced" into the role. "Luckily, I like simple, 'Moe Tucker' drums," she adds. "I wasn't trying to do anything complicated." Indeed, like Tucker's work with the Velvet Underground - infamously guided by Lou Reed's maxim that "cymbals eat guitars" - Ari's rhythm tracks are spare but perfectly formed. Their pulses lend the songs a crucial sense of motion, but leave plenty of precious sonic real estate free for Gary Mundy and Ari's layers of cloudburst guitar and bass and for Dominic Appleton's otherworldly keyboard textures and haunted, resonant vocal. The songs of See Those Colours Fly possess a hallucinogenic and dreamlike quality - coloured by ineffable magic but always guided by hooks. The album is firmly in the grand tradition of Breathless music - epic, ethereal, otherworldly - but there's an economy to these dulcet visions, their hunger for wide-open sounds tempered by a discipline, a commitment to the song. The result is perhaps the most perfectly distilled album of the group's career. "For us, lockdown has been very positive," adds Ari, wryly. The enforced downtime enabled the group to allow the new music to simmer at its own pace, to layer up its many potent elements. " One of the most potent elements of the album comes from outside of the core trio. Breathless first collaborated with Kramer - the New York polymath behind such legendary underground groups as Bongwater, B.A.L.L., Shockabilly and Dogwater, and whose production work has proved an.


  • whiskers
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