S/T

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (20 ratings)
S/T album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 10   Total Length: 49:02

Write a Review 3 Member Reviews

Please register before you review a release. Register

user avatar

For lovers of Silent Hill.

bitterwyrm

Came across these guys from a video on YouTube. Reminded me of Akira Yamaoka's soundtrack work of the Silent Hill games francise. This is perfect night-time listening, very atmospheric and does for me what a lot of other bands in this genre don't. The sound stays with you for a few days after listening, the way a good movie does.

user avatar

What's in a name?

NewMoon

I've liked this artist ("THE" Gentlemen Losers) music on echoes.org, but have been confused about this CD title for long while. I was looking for the self-titled album "The Gentlemen Losers"... but finally figured out that "S/T" means "self-titled"? Someone here should fix that so this album comes up properly when doing a search? [ok, rant over]... I haven't heard all the tracks yet, but so far my favorites are "Laureline" and "Silver Mountain." Definitely wonderful and good ambient listening, relaxing. Looking forward to listening to the others.

user avatar

Drugged Western Motif

Endustry

I recently discovered this album but it's already close to being alltime favorite. It's primarily a cinematic/post-rock album with loose song structures built around acidic electronic treatments and memorable acoustic guitar loops that bring to mind images of stumbling through a Sergio Leone western on downers. A lot of people try to make music like this; few do it this well.

Recommended Albums

They Say All Music Guide

For its inaugural release, the City Centre Offices subsidiary Büro introduced the Gentlemen Losers, a peaceful post-rock duo from Finland. Past the short walk-in “An Empire of Coins,” one immediately thinks of Mogwai and Below the Sea — for the laid-back feel, the slight melancholia, and the medium durations — with a touch of Low’s post-Morricone twang. All these elements are found in the first few tracks, “Gold Dust Afternoon” and “Slow Guitars” standing out as highlights (and the guitars are not the only slow instruments: piano, glockenspiel, and bassoon also crawl around in that particular piece). Further down the track list, the Kuukka brothers remind listeners of their Scandinavian roots; the pastoral hymn “Laureline” and the particular melodicism of “Light Fandango” evoke Bo Hansson and the duo Sagor & Swing. Samu Kuukka’s keyboards and Ville Kuukka’s acoustic and electric guitars are backed by beatboxes, real drums, and mallet percussion, all providing a diverse and changing sound palette. Even though the Gentlemen Losers’ debut clearly operates within the limits of a specific style, it offers a lot to like, from seducing melodies to intelligent arrangements — and it is less bleak than most albums in that vein. A strong first effort from a group worth keeping an ear toward. – François Couture

more »