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Possible Humans - Everybody Split (2019)

Possible Humans - Everybody Split (2019)

BAND/ARTIST: Possible Humans

  • Title: Everybody Split
  • Year Of Release: 2019
  • Label: Trouble In Mind Records
  • Genre: Alternative, Indie Rock
  • Quality: 320 / FLAC (tracks)
  • Total Time: 41:59
  • Total Size: 100 / 261 Mb
  • WebSite:
Tracklist:

1. Lung of the City (3:58)
2. Aspiring To Be A Bloke (3:27)
3. The Thumps (4:34)
4. Absent Swimmer (4:27)
5. Nomenclature Airspace (2:03)
6. Orbiting Luigi (2:42)
7. Stinger (3:54)
8. Born Stoned (11:46)
9. Meredith (5:07)

The unassuming Melbourne five-piece build garage-jangle guitars and blunt-edged harmonies into strangely hypnotic arrangements that feel simultaneously long and short.

In the age of Bandcamp democratization, anyone with an internet connection can record, say, a collection of Dixie Chicks covers, or an hour of improvisions, and then make it public, no financial strings attached. That’s how Melbourne-based five-piece Possible Humans released their 2016 debut Ringwood/Ozone, one of the more interesting pieces of Bandcamp debris to surface in the past few years. Ringwood/Ozone demonstrated the group’s talent for extending mostly freeform pop across a whole record; strange and often silly, it showed off their chops without really seeming to try. On their new album Everybody Split, Possible Humans marry that penchant for layered, fluid songwriting with an impeccable sense for well-crafted pop songs, resulting in one of Melbourne’s most pleasant rock records in recent memory.

While no songs are as loose as anything from their debut, Everybody Split still shows a certain affinity for raucous guitar jams. The 12-minute “Born Stoned,” the only such long track here, sprints toward a climax of squalling guitars and pounding cymbal. After a run of denser, more ambling songs like “Nomenclature Airspace” and “Stinger,” it arrives as a shock to the system. The vocals feel redundant; even without a lyrical anchor, Possible Humans’ musicianship is a magnetic joy. With no obvious high points nor particularly boring stretches, the album feels paced for start-to-finish listening.

The easiest comparison for Possible Humans’ sound is New Zealand indie rock progenitors the Clean. Saying a band from Melbourne sounds like the Clean is akin to saying a river is wet: nearly always true, and rarely worth noting. Where Everybody Split feels most closely tied is the small scene around Hobbies Galore, the Melbourne-based label that released it. Operated by Alex Macfarlane, a member of beloved local bands the Stevens and Twerps, Hobbies Galore has released excellent records by the Stroppies, Blank Realm, and J. McFarlane’s Reality Guest, and Possible Humans sit flush with its slate of oddball indie rock and post-punk.




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  • mufty77
  •  wrote in 23:21
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Many thanks for lossless.
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  • ingeborg
  •  wrote in 01:35
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Many thanks for lossless.