Sightseeing Crew - Muffled Ears, the World Sounds Bad Quality (2026) Hi-Res

  • 10 Feb, 11:06
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Artist:
Title: Muffled Ears, the World Sounds Bad Quality
Year Of Release: 2026
Label: Independent
Genre: Psychedelic, Jazz, Indie, Jazz-Rock, Post-Rock
Quality: FLAC (tracks) / FLAC (tracks) 24bit-44.1kHz
Total Time: 45:20
Total Size: 300 / 564 Mb
WebSite:

Tracklist:

01. Orchid (Intro) (1:27)
02. Yestermillisecond (2:55)
03. Muffled Ears (3:24)
04. Another Day in Uniform (4:44)
05. After August, Pt. 1 (2:31)
06. Butcher (3:11)
07. Firearm (5:06)
08. Kiss from the Sun & Learning to Count (3:25)
09. Window (4:55)
10. Bonbon (6:02)
11. Planets (5:00)
12. Reprise (2:41)

Newly released album Muffled Ears, the World Sounds Bad Quality finds Reading, England-based artist Sightseeing Crew crafting a sophisticated collision of psychedelic jazz-rock and modern digital anxiety. Centered on the “Static Man” protagonist, a relatable figure overwhelmed by modern information overload, the record maneuvers through textures of gripping orchestration and consuming vocals to explore alienation in today’s digital age. The result is a standout listening experience from the act, which represents the solo project of Andrew Vickers.

Opening track “Orchid” consumes with its vibrant, atmospheric quality — weaving blaring brass, ethereal woodwinds, and a general sense of momentum into a soulfully ravishing vocal lushness. “Yestermillisecond” follows seamlessly with further brass-laden clarity, here bolstered by twangy guitars and glistening keys that maneuver into intoxicating rhythms and serene vocal entrancement. The interplay between free-flowing guitars, rumbling bass, and twinkling keys leads a wholly impactful production, with the mid-point strings and caressing vocal work adding with blissful energy thereafter.

“Muffled Ears” continues the album’s knack for tonal versatility, initially strutting a funk-friendly rhythmic pulse that ventures into moments of spacious intrigue, with mesmerizing vocals, illuminated piano, and affecting brass taking front and center. These elements all culminate beautifully into a stellar finale, with dreamy vocals and starry-eyed piano tones. Another stunning showcase in dynamic range comes on “Butcher,” evolving from understated acoustic guitar trickling and woozy vocals into a swooning, textured array of tender guitars, bright keys, and wandering brass.

The album’s high-quality songwriting doesn’t let up as the second half progresses, excelling in both rainy-day contemplators like “Window” and haunting dream-pop hypnotics in the vein of “planets” — both tracks enamoring in their drive from subdued charm into more bursting fervency. Abundant in quality songwriting and dazzling, sophisticated productions, Muffled Ears, the World Sounds Bad Quality is a thoroughly resonating success of an album from Sightseeing Crew.