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Growing Seeds

Rate It! Avg: 3.5 (10 ratings)
Growing Seeds album cover
01
Behind Curtains
3:52 $0.99
02
It's You
3:27 $0.99
03
We Planted A Seed
2:40 $0.99
04
Champagne
3:57 $0.99
05
La Rouge
1:31 $0.99
06
Cover Their Faces
4:11 $0.99
07
Always Changing
2:59 $0.99
08
Modern Life
3:00 $0.99
09
We Got Lust
3:11 $0.99
10
Neon Lights Appear
3:51 $0.99
11
OSK (Bonus Track)
5:23 $0.99
12
Gently (Bonus Track)
1:57 $0.99
13
First Touch (Bonus Track)
2:22 $0.99
Album Information
EDITOR'S PICK

Total Tracks: 13   Total Length: 42:21

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eMusic Review 1

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J. Edward Keyes

Editor-in-Chief

J. Edward Keyes has been writing about music for nearly 15 years, a fact he occasionally finds terrifying. His work has appeared in Rolling Stone, the Village V...more »

11.13.12
Bleak, nihilistic minimalism
2012 | Label: Sacred Bones Records / S.C. Distribution

The debut from the Gothenberg act Lust for Youth – essentially the alias of one Hannes Norvide – feels like it’s set deep inside some ice cave in the outer reaches of the uninhabited arctic. The synths are as chilly and rigid as stalactites, and Norvide’s voice – a crude, teenage-Robert Smith holler – bounces up from somewhere deep, dark and unseen.

The minimalism is as much a pragmatic matter as an aesthetic one: Norvide recorded the album in his bedroom on borrowed equipment, and the record doesn’t waste time with unnecessary flourishes. The songs are built on fat, steel-cold synth bars and usually consist of little more than a drum track and a single melody line. Sonically, it rivals the primitivism of early minimalists like The Normal, but it feels bleaker and more nihilistic. That such relentlessly despondent sounds were inspired by, to quote Norvide directly, “new love,” feels like some philosophy major’s perverse joke.

Growing Seeds refuses to acknowledge the existence of any notes on the Casio above middle C. “Always Changing” chugs robotically, like a runaway train in a Westworld outtake, and “It’s You” sounds like “Blue Monday” played on a Speak & Spell – both using big, blocky… read more »

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