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An untamable and constantly surprising record, Suddenly is about family and changes we go through. Though it retains the trademark Caribou warmth and technicolor, this album is littered with swerves and left turns that will keep listeners guessing.
For 26-year-old Steve Ellison's deservedly hyped third album, Flying Lotus loosened the reins and set out to make Cosmogramma, which his label, Warp, promoted as a space opera of sorts.
The seminal Swim is the record Caribou has wanted to bring to fruition for as long as he has been making music. Swim is a complex affair rife with fascinating rhythms, instrumentation, and vocals that grow more alluring with each listen.
Caribou, aka Dan Snaith, injects a bit of British psychedelia into this fourth album. It's as if The Zombies’ ‘Odessey And Oracle’ was reworked by Four Tet.
Elaenia is a dazzling score which puts Shepherd in the spotlight as a composer who has produced an album that bridges the gap between his rapturous dance music and formative classical roots that draws upon everything Shepherd has done to date.
CORBEN introduces us to "Peachland," an introspective retro-futuristic journey where early electro and downtempo go hand in hand in order to create a cybernetic vision of the '80s subculture.
Why, Bill? "Songs tend to mutate after they've been recorded. These songs were mutating faster than usual. Like whatever happened to Bruce Banner in the lab - I knew these songs were about to get superpowers... this change needed to be documented."
For Dabeull, analog production is his favorite playground as evidenced by this new 9-track album which was recorded using Michael Jackson's "Thriller" console. - 100% analog!