Music Reviews tagged with post-rock
Explosions In The Sky Take Care, Take Care, Take Care
Explosions In The Sky bring nothing new to the table with Take Care, Take Care, Take Care - but kick back and enjoy the ride and you'll still find plenty to enjoy.
Joel Stanier reviews...Rob Padgham Stemwinder
Rob Padgham mines his record collection for inspiration, resulting in an album full of exploration.
Andrew Baer likes the music in the northernmost corner of the Northwest...Jónsi Go
The Sigur Rós frontman releases an album more bombastic and massive than anything he's made before.
Andrew Baer thinks this is absurdly happy music...Efterklang Magic Chairs
Danish visionaries Efterklang return with album number three, their first for the prestigious 4AD. A stripped down sound and a more direct focus means this is a record of pop gems to be truly savoured.
Jody White again discovers how less really can be more...We Only Said We Only Said
We Only Said make an album of incredibly uninteresting guitar centered post-rock.
Andrew Baer zones out for a while, but does so pleasantly...Thee Silver Mt. Zion Memorial Orchestra Kollaps Tradixionales
Despairing, bleak, hopeless and defiant. Yay!
Alan Shulman reviewsJaga Jazzist One Armed Bandit
Jaw-droppingly tight, yet free-flowing and consistently beautiful. Have Norway's Jaga Jazzist already released the record of the year?
Jody White gets blown away...Radian Chimeric
Radian return from a five-year hiatus with an album tirelessly stitched of broken ideas and angry menacing. Rarely has hard work been less fun to listen to.
Ryan Pratt plays Chimeric during Halloween, plans to keep all his candy...The Twilight Sad Forget The Night Ahead
The follow up to 2007's Fourteen Autumns and Fifteen Winters fails to match the dizzy heights of its predecessor.
Nick Fenn reviews...The Declining Winter Haunt the Upper Hallways
On their second official album, The Declining Winter (featuring Richard Adams of Hood) reminds everyone how pretty winter is to look at. What do you mean, how does it sound?
Ryan Pratt reviews...
