Track Listing 1. Intro/Magnetic Tales 2. Be Colony, The 3. How Do You Get Along Sir? 4. Will You Read me 5. Reception/Group Thearpy 6. Quiet Moment, A 7. I See, So I See So 8. You Must Wake 9. One Million Years Ago 10. Seancing Song, A 11. Mr Beard, You Chatterbox 12. Drug Party 13. Libra, the Mirror's Minor Self 14. Love's Long Listen-in 15. We Are After All Here 16. Medium's High, A 17. Ritual/Looking In 18. Make My Sleep His Song 19. Royal Chant 20. What I Saw 21. Let it Begin/Oh Joy 22. Round and Round and Round 23. Be Colony/Dashing Home/What on Earth Took You?7, The
| Details | | Distributor: | Redeye Music Distribution | | Recording Type: | Studio | | SPAR Code: | n/a |
Album Notes Recording information: 01/08/2009. Broadcast's music has always been a little unearthly, so BROADCAST & THE FOCUS GROUP INVESTIGATE WITCH CULTS OF THE RADIO AGE isn't so much a departure as it is an inspired homage to their influences. VALERIE AND HER WEEK OF WONDERS and its alternately innocent and menacing soundtrack inspired the band years before the movie was rediscovered. The whimsy and strangely familiar feel of '60s and '70s library music could also be heard in their music from the beginning, but never more clearly than on this mini-album. Broadcast's more esoteric side is heightened by the Focus Group, whose Ghost Box label is ground zero for the evocatively named "hauntology" micro-genre, which digs deep into vintage electronics and notions of what people thought the future would be like -- two things Broadcast have always done, even if they're not explicitly part of the hauntology crowd. INVESTIGATE WITCH CULTS OF THE RADIO AGE's highly detailed, evocative miniatures replace TENDER BUTTONS' stark clarity with softly busy collages full of literal and figurative layers. Analog synths, distant beats, guitar arpeggios, and clouds of Trish Keenan's vocals flit in and out of snippets like "Will You Read Me" in a gently disorienting and deeply trippy fashion. Yet the feel goes beyond being merely druggy, although the funky "How Do You Get Along Sir?" and self-explanatory "Drug Party" certainly imply chemical enhancement. Most tracks radiate a spectral purity, or suggest something as hallucinatory as ghosts taking drugs. But while INVESTIGATE WITCH CULTS OF THE RADIO AGE has a few spooky moments, most notably "Libra, the Mirror's Minor Self," it's more charmingly odd than unnerving, with the dusty warmth of mellowing in an attic somewhere. Not so much a soundtrack to a film that was never made as it is music that demands images to accompany it, this is a welcome return after the four years of silence that followed TENDER BUTTONS.
| See an error? Submit a change request |