Chromatics - Kill for Love (2012):
01 Into the Black (Neil Young cover)
02 Kill for Love
03 Back from the Grave
04 The Page
05 Lady
06 These Streets Will Never Look the Same
07 Broken Mirrors
08 Candy
09 The Eleventh Hour
10 Running from the Sun
11 Dust to Dust
12 Birds of Paradise
13 A Matter of Time
14 At Your Door
15 There's a Light Out on the Horizon
16 The River
Genre(s): Dream pop, synth pop, indie rock
This draft is moving at a rather speedy pace! In one sense, it's quite freeing. Ordinarily I would be very deliberate in the curation of my draft order. Now I'm just kind of flipping through my record collection and selecting albums that I adore, but that don't necessarily fit any particular pattern or represent any kind of thematic arc.
I've selected this next album because it is nearing 1:00am as I write this, and I felt like listening to something perfectly suited to the hour. Chromatics are the sound of driving through rain-soaked, neon-lit streets late at night. Their 2012 album Kill for Love is perhaps the best distillation of their sonic palette. This is cinematic music, a film score with no film attached to it. But it's not hard to conjure up Capital-R Romantic imagery from films like Michael Mann's Thief and Manhunter as a backdrop for these big, glassy soundscapes.
Johnny Jewel, the mastermind behind Chromatics, is a notoriously fussy musician. He has an ear for bending the hazily-remembered nostalgia of the 1980's into cavernous, lonely productions that evoke a kind of existential ache somewhere on the edge of the listener's subconscious. You don't even really know why it feels like your heart's been cracked open as Kill for Love closes, but it's a beautiful kind of pain, like being visited by the ghost of your childhood.
01 Into the Black (Neil Young cover)
02 Kill for Love
03 Back from the Grave
04 The Page
05 Lady
06 These Streets Will Never Look the Same
07 Broken Mirrors
08 Candy
09 The Eleventh Hour
10 Running from the Sun
11 Dust to Dust
12 Birds of Paradise
13 A Matter of Time
14 At Your Door
15 There's a Light Out on the Horizon
16 The River
Genre(s): Dream pop, synth pop, indie rock
This draft is moving at a rather speedy pace! In one sense, it's quite freeing. Ordinarily I would be very deliberate in the curation of my draft order. Now I'm just kind of flipping through my record collection and selecting albums that I adore, but that don't necessarily fit any particular pattern or represent any kind of thematic arc.
I've selected this next album because it is nearing 1:00am as I write this, and I felt like listening to something perfectly suited to the hour. Chromatics are the sound of driving through rain-soaked, neon-lit streets late at night. Their 2012 album Kill for Love is perhaps the best distillation of their sonic palette. This is cinematic music, a film score with no film attached to it. But it's not hard to conjure up Capital-R Romantic imagery from films like Michael Mann's Thief and Manhunter as a backdrop for these big, glassy soundscapes.
Johnny Jewel, the mastermind behind Chromatics, is a notoriously fussy musician. He has an ear for bending the hazily-remembered nostalgia of the 1980's into cavernous, lonely productions that evoke a kind of existential ache somewhere on the edge of the listener's subconscious. You don't even really know why it feels like your heart's been cracked open as Kill for Love closes, but it's a beautiful kind of pain, like being visited by the ghost of your childhood.