One of the most interesting debuts of the last months, the Canadian yoo doo right have just released their first long play Don't Think You Can Escape Your Purpose and it hits so hard in the best way possible.
The band describes their music in a very picturesque way, talking about the guitar and synthesizer soundscapes in which "solemn, chin-to-chest vocals dance in and out of the primordial sonic spectrum". And indeed, the album starts with a solid dose of guitar blizzard in a very post-rock-like compositions, that, at the same, suggest a lot of psychedelic rock influences, especially with the way the repetitive drums induce mesmerizing trance as do the similarly repetitive vocals that appear somewhere in the middle of the album. But the main magnet for me is the quality of the noise. It is always present, sometimes in the backgrounds, sometimes in more prominent role and especially attractive in the perfectly loud finish in Black Moth.
Their music seems to draw inspirations from both past (Marché des vivants' title may be taken from the event held in Poland to commemorate the Jewish victims of WWII) and future (extremely Black Mirror-like vibes can be felt in The Moral Compass of a Self-Driving Car particularly). And perhaps everything that fits their spacial and massive music that shows a lot of space vibes (they introduce themselves as "part interstellar ear-worms" after all) and induces striking feelings in the audience.
Don't Think You Can Escape Your Purpose costs 9.99 CAD.
Check: Black Moth
Country: Canada
Genre: psychedelic post-rock
Label: Mothland
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