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And Those Who Were Seen Dancing
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And Those Who Were Seen Dancing
Current price: $36.99
Barnes and Noble
And Those Who Were Seen Dancing
Current price: $36.99
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In 2013
Tess Parks
was an up-and-coming young Canadian artist making her debut on
359 Music
, the latest venture from U.K. label Svengali
Alan McGee
. While her fuzzed-out solo debut,
Blood Hot
, didn't quite vault her to star status, it led to an intriguing pair-up with psych rock explorer
Anton Newcombe
(
Brian Jonestown Massacre
), with whom she went on to make two collaborative albums. By engaging with a different, yet musically adjacent project, she was able to side-step the usual sophomore expectations and continue developing her art with some veteran help. Arriving nine years after its predecessor,
Parks
' solo follow-up,
And Those Who Were Seen Dancing
, falls somewhere between the cool grit of her debut and the billowing psych drones of her work with
Newcombe
. Recorded over a two year period between Los Angeles, Toronto, and London, it's a rather sprawling collection of midtempo grooves and densely packed layers of guitars, synths, and organs. Led by the hypnotic "WOW" and its sister song "Suzy & Sally's Eternal Return" (both revolve around eerily similar rhythm and chord patterns), the immediate effect is one of languid, but insistent forward motion. Under vocals that are equal parts airy and growling, the songs seem to chug along in repetitive swirls of spacey effects and warm distortion with no terminus in sight. At first blush, the whole set seems to blow by in a continuous fug of similarity, though repeated listens reveal a bit more nuance. The flowery "Happy Birthday Forever" and spoken word "Brexit at Tiffany's" conjure some late-'60s vibes via an early-'90s aesthetic and the slow pulsing grandeur of "I See Angels" feels like a throwback to
Spiritualized
's hazy space rock. Still, the overall impression of
' second solo album is less a collection of tightly crafted songs than of a willowy chunk of music captured during its slow passage on the timeline. How appealing this is depends on one's proclivities, but there is enough ear candy here to hold the attention, at least for a little while. ~ Timothy Monger
Tess Parks
was an up-and-coming young Canadian artist making her debut on
359 Music
, the latest venture from U.K. label Svengali
Alan McGee
. While her fuzzed-out solo debut,
Blood Hot
, didn't quite vault her to star status, it led to an intriguing pair-up with psych rock explorer
Anton Newcombe
(
Brian Jonestown Massacre
), with whom she went on to make two collaborative albums. By engaging with a different, yet musically adjacent project, she was able to side-step the usual sophomore expectations and continue developing her art with some veteran help. Arriving nine years after its predecessor,
Parks
' solo follow-up,
And Those Who Were Seen Dancing
, falls somewhere between the cool grit of her debut and the billowing psych drones of her work with
Newcombe
. Recorded over a two year period between Los Angeles, Toronto, and London, it's a rather sprawling collection of midtempo grooves and densely packed layers of guitars, synths, and organs. Led by the hypnotic "WOW" and its sister song "Suzy & Sally's Eternal Return" (both revolve around eerily similar rhythm and chord patterns), the immediate effect is one of languid, but insistent forward motion. Under vocals that are equal parts airy and growling, the songs seem to chug along in repetitive swirls of spacey effects and warm distortion with no terminus in sight. At first blush, the whole set seems to blow by in a continuous fug of similarity, though repeated listens reveal a bit more nuance. The flowery "Happy Birthday Forever" and spoken word "Brexit at Tiffany's" conjure some late-'60s vibes via an early-'90s aesthetic and the slow pulsing grandeur of "I See Angels" feels like a throwback to
Spiritualized
's hazy space rock. Still, the overall impression of
' second solo album is less a collection of tightly crafted songs than of a willowy chunk of music captured during its slow passage on the timeline. How appealing this is depends on one's proclivities, but there is enough ear candy here to hold the attention, at least for a little while. ~ Timothy Monger