Dustland

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (75 ratings)
Dustland album cover
Album Information
EDITOR'S PICK

Total Tracks: 12   Total Length: 51:54

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Made my morning

MMI

I found this while browsing and I'm overjoyed. This is very close to the album that I've long been writing in my head. But really, IDM???

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Gorgeous

mdc

Really beautiful

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More ace pop from City Centre Offices!

Cedardude

Between Morr Music and CCO you really cannot go wrong for Indietronica. More please.

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Soothing ambient

okayfine

Haunting but not melancholy. "Bonetown Boys" has more of a trip-hop feel than the rest. Also, "Oblivion's Tide" (track 6) is almost silent, mostly low static, specifically it sounds like a needle on a vinyl album, a few seconds of seagulls, and some faint victrola music. It fits in the overall listen, but if you're short on downloads you could skip that little 99 second interlude.

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They Say All Music Guide

The sophomore release by the Gentlemen Losers finds the brother team of Samu and Ville Kuukka again happily at work creating a contemplative series of instrumentals that readily mix and match a variety of guitar-based styles. There’s as much a mid-’70s Pink Floyd zone on display — as “Ballad of Sparrow Young” shows in a restrained way — as there is the kind of gentle focused yearning one might expect from the Durutti Column. The latter is most readily invoked in “The Echoing Green,” with what almost sounds like wordless vocals adding a romantic glaze to the performance, but perhaps the strongest theme throughout Dustland isn’t musical per se but more generally sonic. The sense of found-sound atmospherics — the hiss of distant wind and other natural noises — adds a constant underpinning to the various performances; it’s not quite the Baltic Sea equivalent of that murkily beautiful approach so many New Zealand guitar experimenters have tried, but it’s not too far removed from it either. There’s sterner stuff as well, as the thwacked drums and obsessive structure of “Bonetown Boys” shows, while the Mellotron touches on “Spider Lily” and tape fuzz on “Silver Water Ripples” add further glazes. But the concluding “Pebble Beach” ends things with a gentle melody and a full arrangement, a last sunset for an enjoyable release. – Ned Raggett

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