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Going Places

Rate It! Avg: 4.0 (35 ratings)
Going Places album cover
01
Foiled
4:23 $0.99
02
Opt Out
13:09
03
Sovereign
5:44 $0.99
04
Limited Space
6:53 $0.99
05
New Life
5:18 $0.99
06
Going Places
9:10 $0.99
Album Information

Total Tracks: 6   Total Length: 44:37

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fuzz

sly75

like Forensic below this was the first time I've listened to Yellow Swans, can't believe I missed out on them!....dense layers of distorted guitar building to immense crescendos....if you like this kind of thing then get this

user avatar

beautiful

puffycocktail

Constantly evolving soundscape that will turn on fans of Tim Hecker--exceptional.

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Dense

Forensic

My first foray into Yellow Swans and am enjoying it very much. If you like your drone dense and with great slabs of distorted guitar reverbing all around the room then you should get this now. Such a shame they've split as I would love to have seen them live...

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They Say All Music Guide

Released after the duo formally called it a day, Yellow Swans’ literal swan song found the two still exploring their way through often majestic drone — if the roots of the band had always been as much in uncontrolled experimentation as in serene contemplation, here the two sides found a fine fusion. It’s evident from the start with “Foiled,” where a buried mantra of a melody is surrounded by cascades of feedback and rhythmic, quick-paced sonics that feel like being caught in the world’s biggest washing machine. It sets the general tone for the rest of the album, as the contrast — simple but devastatingly effective — of scraggly aural squalor and a looming sense of near-romantic melancholy plays out. “Limited Space” takes a slightly different feeling, cutting back the deeper, booming bass levels and featuring a central chime that feels more like you’re floating above a thunderstorm than caught in the middle of it, building up to a steady, percussive pulse like a god’s heartbeat. The title track, meanwhile, provides a fitting conclusion to both album and band, an increasingly high-volume squall that feels like an endless rise up and out, concluding on one last guitar part screaming away into the heavens behind a last swirl of distorted echo. “Opt Out,” the longest track featured, might be the pinnacle of how the chaotic noise gets more violent even as a lovely guitar part fights to be heard in the mix; it’s a fine representation of the album as a whole. – Ned Raggett

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