After a slow start, 2021 is starting to heat up and it's a pretty good week for new releases here in Indie Basement: Django Django are back with their best album since their first; Virginia Wing continue to surprise and enchant on their fourth album; Australian and occasional Total Control member David West is back with a new album of superior mopey janglepop as Rat Columns; Australian dreampop duo Heligoland team with Cocteau Twins' Robin Guthrie for their first album in over a decade; UK group Mush deliver a second album of skronky indie rock. Plus, a new single from Cheval Sombre's upcoming Sonic Boom-produced album, newish Virginia indiepop group So Badly, and Lost Horizons (Simon Raymonde and Richie Thomas).
If you need more reviews, Andrew looks at slowthai and more in Notable Releases. As for other Basement-approved stuff from this week: Massive Attack's 3D remixed Gang of Four; New Age Steppers (Ari Up & Adrian Sherwood) are getting their whole catalog reissued; so is Peter Murphy (well his first five solo albums); and Dry Cleaning announced their debut album;
PS, did you know BrooklynVegan has a shop now? You can pick up Indie Basement faves like JARV IS, Caribou, Porridge Radio, OSEES, LCD Soundsystem, and more.
Head below for this week's new stuff:
ALBUM OF THE WEEK #1: Django Django - Glowing In The Dark (Because Music) The Scottish dance-surf-psych band's fourth album is their most fun since the first
Scottish band Django Django got their start back in 2009, when MySpace was still a thing, and in the "influences" section of their profile they put up thumbnails of over 100 albums including The Beach Boys' Smiley Smile, the first Fun Boy 3 LP, the Blade Runner soundtrack and the Beta Band's Hot Shots II. The latter was a bit of nepotism -- drummer/bandleader Dave McLean's brother, John, was in Beta Band -- but they both have a crate-digger's a love of music. Even though they only had one single out at the time -- "Storm" / "Love's Dart" -- those four records still embody what Django Django are all about, a mix of surf pop, post-punk, new wave, reggae and dub, prog, soundtrack music, Madchester, techno, rave, and groove-oriented psychedelia. Also: fun.
Glowing in the Dark is their most fun record since their great self-titled debut. Their 2015 sophomore album, Born Under Saturn, was good and 2018's Marble Skies was better, but this one really has that Django Django-iness that smooshes the line between dance music and guitar pop, all while sounding like they're doing it beachside for a tiki party. This album has a bunch of bangers, starting with the title track which uses a beat right out of Stetsasonic's "Talkin' All That Jazz," a few synthesizers, a stuttering vocal hook and not much else to achieve liftoff. There's also "Spirals," that borrows from gothy post-punk (early New Order specifically) but makes a joyous track out of it; "Kick the Devil Out," that dabbles in '80s afrobeat; and "The World Will Turn," a sunset folk-pop number thick with harmony.
There's a real playful spirit at work here. "Got Me Worried" is dune buggy music with a Bo Diddley beat and furiously strummed acoustic guitar that ends in canned applause, leading straight into "Waking Up," a psych-pop number -- featuring lead vocals from Charlotte Gainsbourg! -- that could've been on any number of '80s paisley underground albums. Likewise, the curl-shooting "Headrush" melts seamlessly into the rave comedown of "The Ark." Even the less successful songs, like festival-ready head bobber "Free from Gravity," are presented in such a breezy manner they go down pretty easy. At 44 minutes, it's about the perfect length for a record like this, making a big impression at the party and leaving before it wears out its welcome, and never tries to be anything it's not. Sometimes fun is what you want and what you need.