Twenty-Twenty is finally (suddenly?) wrapping up and new releases are slowing to a trickle. That said, we've still got six this week: Simon Raymonde (Cocteau Twins) and Richie Thomas (Dif Juz) work with John Grant, Porridge Radio, Penelope Isles and more on their second album as Lost Horizons; Liverpool band King Hannah delivering a smoldering late-night debut; the debut album from Jetstream (featuring members of The Wedding Present and Trembling Blue Stars); Jad Fair is back with his 19th Half Japanese album; Stereolab's Tim Gane has a new side project, Ghost Power; and the debut single from Brooklyn's Gustaf.
If you need more new releases, Andrew reviews five more from this week in Notable Releases. Other Basement-approved stuff from this week: Wand's Cory Hanson announced a new solo record; Goat Girl shared a new song from their upcoming second album; and if you haven't watched Lovers Rock on Amazon yet, add it to your queue.
Also: this is the last Bandcamp Friday (when they waive their cut of the profits and give to the artists/labels) and all of this week's releases are purchasable through them.
Head below for this week's reviews.
ALBUM OF THE WEEK: King Hannah - Tell Me Your Mind and I'll Tell You Mine (City Slang)
Liverpool duo make mostly quiet music meant to be played loud on their assured debut.
I generally have a lot of time for music that soothes the nerves but doesn't put you to sleep, and this year I've especially needed it, including recent albums from Loma, Cindy, Woods, Pure X, and Tan Cologne. (Older stuff, too, like Galaxie 500, Beach House, Acetone, etc.) Here's another: the debut from Liverpool duo King Hannah, Tell Me Your Mind and I'll Tell You Mine. Hannah Merrick and Craig Whittle craft layered, mature, memorable indie rock that is heavy on atmosphere. Guitars flow like far-at-sea waves, deep and forceful but never cresting, as the sunset glitters across them, with some Crazy Horse turbulence as songs like "Crème Brûlée" and "Reprise (Moving Day)" stretch out. Song titles -- "And Then Out Of Nowhere, It Rained," "The Sea Has Stretch Marks" -- feel more evocative than literal, just adding to the record's late-night vibe. LIkewise, Hannah's got the perfect voice for music like this, all smoldering cool and, on tracks like "Meal Deal," commanding and powerful. A soundtrack for your next midnight drive down a desolate highway, Tell Me Your Mind and I'll Tell You Mine is quiet music meant to be played loud. Let it wash over you.
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Lost Horizons - In Quiet Moments Pt. 1 (Bella Union)
The duo of Simon Raymonde (Cocteau Twins) and Richie Thomas (Dif Juz) create wonderfully cinematic music with help from some great guest vocalists on their second album, which has been split in two.
Simon Raymonde and Richie Thomas have known each other for nearly 40 years, since their days, respectively, playing in 4AD bands Cocteau Twins and Dif Juz. Neither had made music for two decades, though, before connecting as Lost Horizons and releasing their debut album Ojalá back in 2017. They've got a cinematic sound steeped in their respective histories, and making good use of friends and fellow musicians to voice their compositions. Three years later, Lost Horizons are back with another guest-filled album, In Quiet Moments, that's perhaps more ambitious than the debut. It's certainly bigger, having been split into two halves: In Part 1 is out digitally today and Part 2 will be out February 26 along with vinyl and CDs of all 16 songs.
Given the players' lineage, the studio nature of the product, and all the special guests involved, it's tempting to compare Lost Horizons to This Mortal Coil -- the recording project of 4AD owner Ivo Watts-Russell whose records Raymonde played on -- but this is a totally different vibe than the late-night goth comedown music of TMC. Tracks on In Quiet Moments seem to bend to the voice: "I Woke Up With An Open Heart," featuring Nubiya Brandon of The Hempolics, is jazzy and dubby; "One For Regret," featuring Porridge Radio, is pent-up and anxious; and "Grey Tower," featuring onetime Midlake frontman Tim Smith, is deeply verdant.
That said, the eight songs on In Quiet Moments Pt. 1 are all within the wheelhouse of Raymonde and Thomas, grand music, lushly orchestrated and beautifully arranged. (This is a terrific sounding album.) "Every Beat That Passed," set to an ornate waltz structure, is cut from the same cloth that gave us Cocteau Twins' "Ivo," and while singer Kavi Kwai doesn't sound like Liz Fraser (no one does), she's got the kind of acrobatic pipes this song needs. ("You can’t make music for as long as I have and drop all your influences and habits overnight," says Raymonde, admitting the similarities to his old band.) Staying in the 4AD universe, "Linger," featuring Gemma Dunleavy, is exotic and leans into Dead Can Dance territory.
Elsewhere, John Grant's voice is played like an instrument on "Cordelia" with an orchestra of harmonies that swim in slow motion with ethereal pedal steel (it's a stunner). My favorite, though, is the Penelope Isles collaboration, "Halcyon," which is gloriously blissed-out with Jack Wolter's falsetto harmonies soaring towards the sun. (It sounds a little like Montreal's Besnard Lakes.) In Quiet Moments is above all else a wonderful spotlight on amazing voices.
More amazing voices come with Part 2, including Marissa Nadler, The Innocence Mission's Karen Peris, and Ural Thomas.
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