[dream-pop, experimental, indie-rock] (2024) Alan Sparhawk - White Roses, My God
[dream-pop, experimental, indie-rock] (2024) Alan Sparhawk - White Roses, My God
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Category: Music Total size: 203.37 MBAdded: 7 months ago (2025-03-10 23:39:09)
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Description:
Alan Sparhawk ā White Roses, My God (2024)
Review:
Alan Sparhawk has always been a prolific, protean musician. A restless soul eager to explore unfamiliar sonic and psychic terrain. Though heās obviously (and justifiably) best-known for his thirty years as frontman of the legendary band Low, a look at Sparhawkās many side projects across that same span of time shows him experimenting with everything from punk and funk to production work and improvisation. Low itself never settled for a set sound or approach. The band was always a collaboration-a conversation, a romance-between Sparhawk and his wife, Mimi Parker, who was the bandās co-founder, drummer, co-lead vocalist, and its blazing irreplaceable heart. To take the journey from Lowās hushed early work, through the tremendous melodies of their middle period, all the way to the late lush chaos of their final albums, is to witness heads, hearts, and spirits in an act of perpetual becoming. Parker passed away in 2022 after a long battle with cancer, and there is no question that WHITE ROSES, MY GOD is a record borne of grief. You can hear it in the title, as well as tracks such as āHeavenā, in which Sparhawk describes the afterlife, wrenchingly, as āa lonely place if youāre alone.ā You can sense it too in Sparhawkās decision to create this thing entirely on his own: every note, every lyric, every programmed beat. It would be reductive, even foolish, to see grief as the sole source or the final limit of this taut, brilliant, provocative, thrilling album, whose bold experimentation is powered by profound lyrics and propulsive beats.
Of the albumās composition, Sparhawk had this to say:
āThe kids had the drum machine and a microphone set up in the studio. Theyād have their friends over sometimes, and theyād record themselves taking turns free-styling. I brought them a synth and a voice pitch affect to have more options to mess with but before long, my curiosity won, and I found myself secretly stabbing around at possibilities with the unfamiliar tools, improvising, turning knobs until something would hit and a song would form. In hindsight, I can see now that it must have been what needed to come out of me, but at the time it felt like chaos and naĆÆvetĆ©-even a little desperate. It kept tapping into a part of me that Iāve come to trust, so I kept recording."
āI found that the sounds and the rigidity demanded a certain structure, a framework, and I was trying to improvise songs within that framework. Which meant that the things that were organic had this freedom to be even more non-regimented. I really respect the moment when the music instigates transcendence. The vocals ended up being this very spontaneous, visceral engine. Thereās a moment when something comes out of your mouth that you didnāt know was going to come out, and then it turns into something else. And something else. And it shakes you. Because what just came out was more precise and accurate and organized than anything you could have come up with. Thereās magic in it because it is from the moment that it was created.ā āCan you feel something here?ā Sparhawk asks on āFeel Something.ā The line repeats over and over, evolving first into āI want to feel something hereā and then āCan you help me feel something here?ā Meanwhile the musical means heās chosen to convey this messageāespecially the pitch-shifterāmight seem at first like theyāre making it harder to access that very something he wants us (and himself) to feel. Isnāt the vocoder a barrier between us and the deep emotionality weāve long associated with an Alan Sparhawk vocal? Maybe, maybe not. Probably not. But even if it is, then itās a barrier worth breaking and the music itself is the hammer. Sparhawk conjures forth the ghosts trapped inside these machines. WHITE ROSES, MY GOD is an exorcism whose purpose is not to banish the spirit but to set it free. Trying to trace influences is a dodgy business, and fishing for comp titles is even worse. But letās say youāre looking for forebears and fellow travelers to help situate WHITE ROSES, MY GOD. Just to start with a curveball, how about Childish Gambino, whose āMe and Your Mamaā, Sparhawk has been known to cover live with The Derecho Rhythm Section, the funk quartet he plays in with his son? Or what about upstart weirdos extraordinaire 100 Gecs? Are those nods to fellow-Minnesotan Prince (maybe the Camille songs in particular?) in song titles like āNot the 1ā and āCan U Hearā? And letās not forget Sparhawkās regional compatriot, the great Neil Young. Forget the border for a second: from Duluth, itās 150 miles south to Minneapolis, but itās only 190 miles north to Thunder Bay, Ontario. Thereās always been a healthy dose of Young in Sparhawkās musicāsee for instance the Low+Dirty Three cover of āDown by the Riverāābut wait until you hear the next solo record after this one, recorded with Trampled by Turtles as his backing band and featuring a totally different arrangement of āHeaven.ā WHITE ROSES, MY GOD might remind you of Youngās 1982 album, Trans, and if that sounds like a backhanded compliment then you probably havenāt heard it lately. Young recorded Trans in part as an homage to Kraftwerk; in part as a way to connect with his severely autistic son, whose love of computers helped him learn to communicate; and in part just to say, I donāt have to be who you think I am. Hell, I donāt even have to be who I think I am! Trans is a visionary record that has aged beautifully and buried its skeptics. So will WHITE ROSES, MY GOD. In many ways WHITE ROSES, MY GOD feels like a hard break with the past, almost a debut. And yet thereās incredible continuity with Sparhawkās past work and his traditional ways of working. Heās pathbreaking, yet again, invested as ever in the endless process of becoming himself. As he puts it on āStationā: āI can please myself with the things I seek out.ā Us, too. We are lucky to be here to hear it as it happens. ā bandcamp
Track List:
01. Get Still
02. I Made This Beat
03. Not the 1
04. Can U Hear
05. Heaven
06. Brother
07. Black Water
08. Feel Something
09. Station
10. Somebody Else's Room
11. Project 4 Ever
Media Report:
Genre: dream-pop, experimental, indie-rock
Origin: Duluth, Minnesota, USA
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)
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