Ulrika Spacek - Compact Trauma (2023)
BAND/ARTIST: Ulrika Spacek
- Title: Compact Trauma
- Year Of Release: 2023
- Label: Tough Love Records
- Genre: Indie Rock, Psychedelic Rock
- Quality: Mp3 320 kbps / FLAC (tracks)
- Total Time: 48:52
- Total Size: 120 / 336 MB
- WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:
1. The Sheer Drop (5:51)
2. Accidental Momentary Blur (2:43)
3. It Will Come Sometime (3:40)
4. Lounge Angst (3:54)
5. Diskbänksrealism (5:04)
6. Through France With Snow (1:41)
7. If the Wheels Are Coming off, The Wheels Are Coming Off (4:18)
8. Compact Trauma (5:52)
9. Stuck at the Door (10:46)
10. No Design (5:05)
1. The Sheer Drop (5:51)
2. Accidental Momentary Blur (2:43)
3. It Will Come Sometime (3:40)
4. Lounge Angst (3:54)
5. Diskbänksrealism (5:04)
6. Through France With Snow (1:41)
7. If the Wheels Are Coming off, The Wheels Are Coming Off (4:18)
8. Compact Trauma (5:52)
9. Stuck at the Door (10:46)
10. No Design (5:05)
RIYL: Mercury Rev, Sonic Youth, My Bloody Valentine, Radiohead, Deerhunter, Atlas Sound, Stereolab. Close to 5 years on from their last transmission, Ulrika Spacek resurface from self-imposed exile with their 3rd album, Compact Trauma, a collection of songs that function as a chance treatise of sorts for our current collective condition. With a title like that arriving at this point in time, it’s tempting to interpret the record solely in the context of the global events of the past few years, but the roots of these 10 songs arc back much further in time, charged with their own personalised internal damage. Mid 2018, approaching exhaustion and feeling increasingly fragile from the stresses of itinerant road life, the 5 piece of Rhys Edwards, Rhys Williams, Joseph Stone, Syd Kemp and Callum Brown began work in earnest on the follow up to their 2nd album. Released less than a year earlier and having promoted it constantly in the months that followed, now might have represented a fine moment for the band to take a breath. Yet Ulrika Spacek were not familiar with the concept of slowing down, conditioned by a strong work ethnic and the demands of capricious touring cycles that necessitated more content and at speed. The band’s previous albums had both been recorded in KEN, a studio and rehearsal space that also doubled as their shared home. As writing for album 3 began, KEN suddenly became another victim to the indiscriminate violence of gentrification. Writing and recording was then abruptly shifted to a professional studio in Hackney. Tensions and logistical difficulties soon became apparent. The enforced switch to an unfamiliar locale would have been discomforting enough, but when allied with the fractures already beginning to splinter through the band, made for an especially frazzled experience. Somehow, a record began to emerge though it was one obviously infected with its circumstances. In its first phase of life, Compact Trauma was a document of a band striving to perfect an idea while the universe around them seemed to want to shut down. And then, at an impasse of sorts and with a record halfway complete, it suddenly did. If Ulrika Spacek were a band in need of the breaks applying, it was the force of a global pandemic that made it happen. As the world stood still, Compact Trauma was filed away, unfinished and unheard by the wider world. The prolonged break enforced by myriad lockdowns may have separated the group but it also afforded the 5 time to reflect on what had already been committed to tape... As the lights came back on and the shutters up, they found themselves drawn back towards Compact Trauma. What they rediscovered was a record that seemed to pre-empt the shared grief of a global pandemic. Addressing existential freak out, displacement, substance reliance and encroaching self-doubt, these highly personalised songs suddenly took on a wider significance, speaking in part to a bigger narrative. Opening track, ‘The Sheer Drop’, begins with the line “Homerton is caving in”; ‘It Will Come Sometime’ describes a “liver like a lightbulb and swelling”; and Lounge Angst (an almost perfect description of those maddening lockdown days indoors) laments, ‘seems my friends grew up or left’. The fear and panic is palpable. The lyrics are matched to a soundtrack that oscillates between the febrile and the off-kilter, unconventional song structures and knotty arrangements either spinning the listener in unexpected directions or offering some kind of cathartic release.
Year 2023 | Rock | Alternative | Indie | FLAC / APE | Mp3
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