@lapdhq shoot a woman trying to get to her apartment at point blank range with a rubber bullet.
Alexandria’s page (the woman who helps her): www.tiktok.com/@labyrinthlo...
@lapdhq shoot a woman trying to get to her apartment at point blank range with a rubber bullet.
Alexandria’s page (the woman who helps her): www.tiktok.com/@labyrinthlo...
Worked on novel antivirals.
Two distinct memories of their live show. 1: endless hammer-riff “Fol De Rol”. 2: stark, eerily arranged “Nine Out Of Ten”. Between these bookends, either side of crumbling centrepiece “Couples…” are (as ever) rockabilly sendup character studies; modernist scribble that makes Eliot sound tame.
A diss album to the bandmates who abandoned them mid-tour (look… who can judge) but also a honeymoon album with the lineup they rustled up instead. Lots of extended jams, feeling each other out, and audibly having fun! A tribute to the power of friendship (this lineup would not last a year).
Fully embracing hifi sound, they also flirt with some soft rock sophistipop sounds on side A. Loving the lyrics here, particularly Athlete Cured (even if I don’t care for its music) and U2 diss track In These Times. Compositionally doubling down on some great riffs like my fav “Bremen Nacht”.
Fully embracing hifi sound, they also flirt with some soft rock sophistipop sounds on side A. Loving the lyrics here, particularly Athlete Cured (even if I don’t care for its music) and U2 diss track In These Times. Compositionally doubling down on some great riffs like my fav “Bremen Nacht”.
Grappling with himself and his world - diss tracks for both Nixon and McCartney. The starkness of his debut is replaced by Spector’s typical reverb (ugh). A couple of 50s-style numbers - exorcising demons via the music of his youth? Softness too, in the title track, and the songs for his love.
Grappling with himself and his world - diss tracks for both Nixon and McCartney. The starkness of his debut is replaced by Spector’s typical reverb (ugh). A couple of 50s-style numbers - exorcising demons via the music of his youth? Softness too, in the title track, and the songs for his love.