Songs for the Broken Hearted

Rate It! Avg: 4.0 (66 ratings)
Songs for the Broken Hearted album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 10   Total Length: 71:28

Write a Review 2 Member Reviews

Please register before you review a release. Register

user avatar

Headphone Commute Review

Headphone_Commute

Windy Weber & Carl Hultgren have been releasing minimal ambient and experimental post-rock music since the late 90's. The catalog of this Michigan based husband-and-wife duo spans an eclectic selection of notable labels such as Icon, Ochre, Darla, Brainwashed, and of course, Chicago-based Kranky Records. Songs For The Broken Hearted is Windy & Carl's fourth release on Kranky (being signed to the label for over a decade now), where it perfectly fits among the works by their fellow label-mates, Stars of the Lid, Pan•American, Tim Hecker, and Brian McBride. See full review on headphonecommute.com

user avatar

YAY!!

shoegazer9

Yes! A new Windy & Carl album. I have listened to it several times now, and must say that they are better than ever. Thank you Windy & Carl. Your music has gotten me through some rough times.

Recommended Albums

eMusic Features

0

eMusic Guide to Kranky Records

By Joe Muggs, eMusic Contributor

Kranky's great skill is escapology; it's practically defined by its ability to evade definition. If there is received wisdom about the Chicago label, it's as a home for abstracted guitars, moody soundscapes and occasionally spiky electronic beats: all very serious, very studious, very intense. Maybe when Bruce Adams and Joel Leoschke founded it in 1993, it could have been pegged as an indie label that tended toward the experimental — but with each release it… more »

They Say All Music Guide

While Windy & Carl’s music has often explored the world of extreme emotions filtered through shimmering feedback cascades, 2008 proved to be a watershed year for the duo, with Songs for the Broken Hearted following some months after Windy Weber’s stark solo debut, I Hate People, and to an extent continuing the darker themes of that album while reaching a different resolution. With Windy’s singing here on the opening “Btwn You + Me” sounding at once murkily distanced and close, while the lush guitar work familiar from past albums feels like a looming wave, there’s a lurking dissonance in many of the songs that feels almost palpable. Often the guitars sound downright mean, as the angry buzz and hum of “La Douleur” ebbs and flows before resolving into a more exultant conclusion, while “When We Were” takes a calmer but no less unsettled tone, the stretched-out howls of feedback feeling like caged animals testing their limits against a buried background growl, before turning into a suddenly free keening charge, as if something had been finally set free. This said, not all is so melodramatic: at many points Songs for the Broken Hearted extends the quieter, more gentle feeling of some of the duo’s earliest work together into the present; thus the steady, drowsy drone/chime of “My Love.” “Rhodes,” the album’s centerpiece, has the same cascading, compressed loop familiar from Seefeel’s majestic “Plainsong,” but here it takes precedence, a liberating break, while “The Same Moon and Stars” ends things on the most serene note yet, though even that has a queasy, miasmalike undercurrent covered only to an extent by the surge of the lead guitars. – Ned Raggett

more »