[indie-folk, indie-pop] (2024) India Electric Co. - Pomegranate [...
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- Language English
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  India Electric Co. â Pomegranate (2024)
Review:
Four years in the making, India Electric Co. (Cole Stacey and Joseph OâKeefe) take a giant leap forward with Pomegranate, a highly textured and musically adventurous fifth full-length album. They describe the title track opener as âFresh beginnings that tell the varied and opposing ties that bind myths and symbolism, of loyalty and change, wanting more without losing what you have, ambition and prosperityâ, a description that would also seem an apt summation of the album, embracing as it does a choppy jazzy percussive groove, synths and embellished by fiddle and keys as Cole sings âwhat matters here/Is what weâve got/Instead of what is missingâ. Hollow drums provide the foundation for the jittery Embers as the staccato vocals speak to global decay (âCanât help if we are melted/Burnt out/Canât help if we are toxicâ) and getting out of the way (âHey you losing the cause/Run away/Coz youâre not in the futureâ) if you canât be part of the push to survive (âTry to remember/And hold on whatever it takes/What goes/Will come againâ). The edgy guitar chords were inspired by Rachmaninoffâs Prelude in C# minor.
After The Flood is a calmer affair, built around circling piano motifs emulated by the guitars, a less obtuse Radiohead meets Peter Gabriel shades that again addresses resilience and better days (âI was standing in the rain/Thinking this wonât last/Iâll be standing in the rain/In the photographs⌠And for the first time/After the flood/I can see the sun riseâ) as the instrumentation builds and swirls behind the vocals, fiddle soaring amid the clouds of keyboards before it all suddenly fades. More specifically, nodding to Radiohead, repeated drum patterns underpin the shifting keyboards and tempo of What Keeps You and its stream-of-consciousness lyrics about moving forward (âWhatâs needed is a little luck/To take the heat off the futureâŚthereâs a map on the wall/Thatâs stuck in the past life/Itâs ok to tear it up/We wanna keep alive/What weâre trying to lose⌠What keeps you staring out at night?/What keeps you there?â) as glissando strings, twanged guitars, and distorted accordions build to the finale. A pulsating drum and bass dubstep, discordant tremolo piano stabs, and offbeat drums afford a feel of paranoia to Sirens, complementing lines like âWho shot an arrow in the air/Who picked the target out/Those one-way conversations/There hanging out to dryâ and the repeated refrain âWe donât see eye to eye.â The track sounds like a neurotic Talk Talk as it gathers to a discordant climax.
A repeating bubbling percussive pizzicato violin and Moog motif with rhythmic Latin tinges provide the itchiness to Balancing Act, a number described as about censorship and the destruction it brings (âAll the muddy waters/Of all the lost and found/I just imagined that/thereâs more to it/Than all this heavy trafficâ) but, again the lyrics create protean impressions (âlost property of facts/All the muddy waters/Of all the lost and foundâ) rather than clear semantic images. Taking inspiration from American electronic pop duo Sylvan Esso, Better Unsaid is almost poppy as Moog bass interacts with the acoustic instruments on a song about communication âon the outside looking in,â where âSome things are better unsaid,â ending with the inspired line âout of sight isnât out of hand.â Evoking an Indian texture, with synths emulating tablas to create tension and resolution around the shifting chords, minimal violin and piano giving way to mournful strings, Patterns muses on the nature of existence (âYou said weâre only patterns/(And) thatâs what really matters/And if it ever falls apart/(Itâs) the only thing weâll ever be/Running in circles/Walking into the mazes/And melting awayâ).
Given the lyrics generally donât make for easy interpretation, even when the notes offer direction (Glass Houses, for example, is about hypocrisy ââBubbled wrapped up in apathy/Looking out, like your neighbourâs an enemy/Building walls round to prop up a legacyâ- a theme that runs throughout the album), they might perhaps be considered as part of the aural soundscape, triggering ideas and impressions rather than direct meaning. This allows the senses to be surrounded by the musical shapes, at times skittering like mice as on the Latin, almost carnival rhythms of Cascade, inspired by Cape Verdean singer CesĂĄria Evoraâs Angola with its piano, guitar fiddle and accordion, or surfing the handclaps percussion and pulsing keyboard notes of Boat Beneath The Sky based on the Lewis Carrol poem about growing up and how nothing stays the same (âis it only wonderlands that can stay in the pastâ), at others slow and moodier such as The Gaps with its soulful chords, cascading frills and flowing guitars, or the jazzy late night piano and violins of Fancy Free with its allusion to the Persephone underworld myth (âUnsure, caught in the middle of two worldsâ) in which pomegranates figure extensively. It closes with the gorgeous piano ballad Face To The Sun, their own early hours ebb tide (âItâs later than evening/The partyâs over/Nothing left here to sayâ), Coleâs comforting vocal at its most intimate and warm on the songâs triumphant call for positivity encapsulated in a quote borrowed from Helen Keller â âKeep your face to the sun/Youâll not see the shadowsâ.
They stepped away from the folk path on which they first embarked long ago, embracing electronics and World Music influences to weave their intricate, complex and intoxicating musical webs. Just as in Ancient Greece and Rome, the pomegranate and its fleshy red pulp symbolised death and regeneration; the album has a framework of contrasts and shifting states; bite deep, the seeds within are glistening jewels. â Review by Mike Davies on klofmag.com
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Track List:
01 - Pomegranate
02 - Embers
03 - After the Flood
04 - What Keeps You
05 - Sirens
06 - Balancing Act
07 - Better Unsaid
08 - Patterns
09 - Glass Houses
10 - Cascade
11 - The Gaps
12 - Boat Beneath the Sky
13 - Fancy Free
14 - Face to the Sun
Media Report:
Genre: indie-folk, indie-pop
Origin: UK
Format: FLAC
Format/Info: Free Lossless Audio Codec
Bit rate mode: Variable
Channel(s): 2 channels
Sampling rate: 44.1 KHz
Bit depth: 16 bits
Compression mode: Lossless
Writing library: libFLAC 1.2.1 (UTC 2007-09-17)
Note: If you like the music, support the artist
Files:
(2024) India Electric Co. - Pomegranate [FLAC]- 04 - What Keeps You.flac (26.5 MB)
- 01 - Pomegranate.flac (23.7 MB)
- 02 - Embers.flac (17.3 MB)
- 03 - After the Flood.flac (20.5 MB)
- [TGx]Downloaded from torrentgalaxy.to .txt (0.7 KB)
- 05 - Sirens.flac (17.3 MB)
- 06 - Balancing Act.flac (11.1 MB)
- 07 - Better Unsaid.flac (17.2 MB)
- 08 - Patterns.flac (16.0 MB)
- 09 - Glass Houses.flac (14.4 MB)
- 10 - Cascade.flac (19.3 MB)
- 11 - The Gaps.flac (16.9 MB)
- 12 - Boat Beneath the Sky.flac (16.6 MB)
- 13 - Fancy Free.flac (14.1 MB)
- 14 - Face to the Sun.flac (16.2 MB)
- audiochecker.txt (0.9 KB)
- cover.jpg (20.6 KB)
- Torrent_downloaded_from_Demonoid.is_.txt (0.1 KB)
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