Underground Railroad - White Night Stand (Deluxe Edition) (2011/2020)
BAND/ARTIST: Underground Railroad
- Title: White Night Stand (Deluxe Edition)
- Year Of Release: 2011/2020
- Label: One Little Indian Records
- Genre: Indie Rock, Alternative Rock, Noise Rock
- Quality: 320 kbps | FLAC (tracks)
- Total Time: 00:54:43
- Total Size: 127 mb | 395 mb
- WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:
01. 8 Millimetres
02. We Were Slumbering
03. The Black Widow
04. The Orchid's Curse
05. Russian Doll
06. Yellow Suit
07. Gingko Biloba
08. Lucky Duck
09. Seagull Attack
10. Traces To Nowhere
11. Rude Awakening
12. Sticks And Stones (Live At Olympic Studio, London / 2011)
01. 8 Millimetres
02. We Were Slumbering
03. The Black Widow
04. The Orchid's Curse
05. Russian Doll
06. Yellow Suit
07. Gingko Biloba
08. Lucky Duck
09. Seagull Attack
10. Traces To Nowhere
11. Rude Awakening
12. Sticks And Stones (Live At Olympic Studio, London / 2011)
Having upped sticks from the city of love to the foreboding sprawl of London, Underground Railroad's third LP White Night Stand seems, perhaps understandably, to be product of insomnia and urban paranoia. With a base of post-punk and Sonic Youth to draw from their previous outings, Marion Andrau, Raphael Mura and company now daub from a darker palette in which psyche, post-rock and acerbic reverb all mix to contribute to this the band's most forward-thinking record yet.
Without question, the crunching percussion and eerie keyboard line found in "Lucky Duck", along with the sinister reverberation of the opener "8 Millimetres", catch the ear from the get-go. The latter's infectious tambourine adds a certain bleary-eyed bounce to its deathly boogie, but, sadly, it's a track that is possibly overlong - something that could be said a number of times during White Night Stand's fifty-minute running time.
All the same, there'll be few who'd cut anything from the 9+ minutes of the impressive "Seagull Attack". Ranging from a shouty clatter to precision post-punk to hypnotic tom-tom abuse all the way through to becoming a heavy, repetitive, string-enhanced post-rock monster, its varied pace, intent and volume all totally crush the tail order, almost completely rendering the comparatively dazed "Traces To Nowhere" and "Rude Awakening" obsolete.
Ultimately smudging itself out into echoes and doing so with uncharacteristic voice digitalisation, the drum-heavy experiment "We Were Slumbering" introduces a prog-cum-post-rock feel that segues it into Oceansize country. The high-end guitar wails in "Ginkgo Biloba" reinforce this feel, its shadowy math-psyche running on otherwise unaffected.
Probably a surprise even to Underground Railroad themselves, "The Orchid's Curse" seems to dabble in ominous, Black Sabbath-esque vocal echo and incantation, thinking latterly to throw up walls of feedback as an attempt to block them out. Entirely different, the strong single "Russian Doll" comes out of the traps fast and snarling. With an almost industrial edge to its onslaught, its jagged riffs snag and hold tight. A lighter reprise of that same sound, "Yellow Suit" then puts its teeth away, smothering psychedelic organ with dense reverb as it goes.
White Night Stand isn't perfect. Sleep-deprived and skittish, it's also overweight, patchy and scary. Yet, at the same time, it's exhilarating, urgent and appealing as a result. What else to expect? Carrying on regardless - Londres, on t'aime.
Without question, the crunching percussion and eerie keyboard line found in "Lucky Duck", along with the sinister reverberation of the opener "8 Millimetres", catch the ear from the get-go. The latter's infectious tambourine adds a certain bleary-eyed bounce to its deathly boogie, but, sadly, it's a track that is possibly overlong - something that could be said a number of times during White Night Stand's fifty-minute running time.
All the same, there'll be few who'd cut anything from the 9+ minutes of the impressive "Seagull Attack". Ranging from a shouty clatter to precision post-punk to hypnotic tom-tom abuse all the way through to becoming a heavy, repetitive, string-enhanced post-rock monster, its varied pace, intent and volume all totally crush the tail order, almost completely rendering the comparatively dazed "Traces To Nowhere" and "Rude Awakening" obsolete.
Ultimately smudging itself out into echoes and doing so with uncharacteristic voice digitalisation, the drum-heavy experiment "We Were Slumbering" introduces a prog-cum-post-rock feel that segues it into Oceansize country. The high-end guitar wails in "Ginkgo Biloba" reinforce this feel, its shadowy math-psyche running on otherwise unaffected.
Probably a surprise even to Underground Railroad themselves, "The Orchid's Curse" seems to dabble in ominous, Black Sabbath-esque vocal echo and incantation, thinking latterly to throw up walls of feedback as an attempt to block them out. Entirely different, the strong single "Russian Doll" comes out of the traps fast and snarling. With an almost industrial edge to its onslaught, its jagged riffs snag and hold tight. A lighter reprise of that same sound, "Yellow Suit" then puts its teeth away, smothering psychedelic organ with dense reverb as it goes.
White Night Stand isn't perfect. Sleep-deprived and skittish, it's also overweight, patchy and scary. Yet, at the same time, it's exhilarating, urgent and appealing as a result. What else to expect? Carrying on regardless - Londres, on t'aime.
Year 2020 | Rock | Alternative | Indie | FLAC / APE | Mp3
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