Minor Shadows

Rate It! Avg: 4.0 (46 ratings)
ALBUM INFORMATION
EDITOR'S PICK

Total Tracks: 7   Total Length: 51:14

Write a Review4 Member Reviews

Please log in before you review a release. Log in

user avatar

Sparse post rock in a neighborhood of ghosts

annewithane

Songs from this album kept popping up on my last.fm player. After a while I had to download the album. Gossamer guitar lines. Keyboards that are part "in search of" part "music for airports". A hazy nostalgia floats through the spaces, but it's not overdone. Very nice. Hope this group is still around.

user avatar

I can't write a better review than this guy:

shL

http://www.pitchforkmedia.com/article/record_review/20579-minor-shadows But, "cinematic" describes it well. I love this album!

user avatar

a little eerie...

eric.stein.island

this album rivals the best Ive heard in this down tempo cinematic style of music ala Labradford. Definitely pick up In 1983 He Loved to Fly, Life Indoors and The Sick.

user avatar

something beautiful

plueschohr

if you love labradford ... may this is an alternative ... a wonderful piece of music ... i think ...

Recommended Albums

They Say All Media Guide

A joint collaboration between guitarist Jon Hills and analog synth enthusiast Mark Bajuk, One Mile North’s second record imagines how Papa M’s echo-drenched instrumental guitar work might sound filtered through the tonal warmth of Brian Eno’s tremulous mid-’70s synthpad excursions. Although a few brittle drum machine patterns, trumpets, and well-placed samples also factor into the mix, Minor Shadows is essentially forged on this interplay — it’s about how a guitar’s rhythms can resound against an analog facade, or how an arpeggio can draw new colors out of a thick cloud of chords. Built on a repeating guitar motif and a swell of synths, nine-minute album opener “In 1983 He Loved to Fly” is an appropriately sleepy statement of intent. Other highlights include the gently percolating guitar tones in “The Sick,” the vaporous chord progressions in the gentle “Black Lines,” and the sprawling sawtooth lullaby of album closer “The Manual.” Too active to be regarded as proper ambient music, Minor Shadows is nonetheless a slow and meditative record that requires time to germinate; just like the albums it so lovingly references, it too will reward listeners for their investment. – Mark Pytlik

more »