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Thurston Moore Rock’N’Roll Consciousness

Thurston Moore — Rock’N’Roll Consciousness (28/04/2017)

 Thurston Moore — Rock’N’Roll Consciousness (28/04/2017)   Thurston Moore — Rock’N’Roll Consciousness (28/04/2017)♣   Je zřejmé, že osobní krize a rozpad manželství ho nevzdálil od hmatníku. Jinými slovy, zdá se, že Moore je nastaven na životní prostředí, aniž to očekával a předstíral, na perfektní arénu pro umělecký reset uprostřed časově ne tak vzdáleného negativního ohlasu v tisku.
♣   The sound of a questing spirit pushing at the parameters of unlimited freedom...Fotka uživatele Ben Tais Amundssen.
Born: 25 July 1958 in Coral Gables, FL ~ Bethel, CT
Location: London, UK
Album release: 28/04/2017
Record Label: Caroline/Ecstatic Peace
Duration:     42:59
Tracks:
1 „Exalted“     11:54
2 „Cusp“     6:34
3 „Turn On“     10:18
4 „Smoke of Dreams“     6:05
5 „Aphrodite“     8:08
℗ 2017 Ecstatic Peace Library, under exclusive license to Caroline International
iTunes Review
≡   Thurston Moore recorded his fifth solo album in just six days with Coldplay/Adele producer Paul Epworth. Ignore anything that suggests about brevity or big hooks though. Opener “Exalted” sets the sprawling tone, tangling noise and discord around its looping grooves and melodies for 12 minutes. A snarling rhythm section of Sonic Youth drummer Steve Shelley and My Bloody Valentine bassist Debbie Googe maintains order throughout, enforcing military rigour on bracing ode to springtime “Cusp” and steadily coaxing along sinuous guitars on “Smoke of Dreams”.
Review
by Stuart Berman, April 28th, 2017 / Score: 7.7
♣   Thurston Moore’s new solo LP evokes the hippie leanings that were always at the heart of Sonic Youth. With some of his most joyous lyrics to date, Moore uses outer aggression to achieve inner bliss.
♣   Though they personified the squall and squalor of 1980s Manhattan, Sonic Youth’s hearts always belonged to 1960s California. Starting with 1985’s Bad Moon Rising, Golden State roots both literal (see: Kim Gordon’s Los Angeles upbringing) and figurative (Lee Ranaldo’s Deadhead past) began to deeply entangle themselves in their knotty guitar gnarl. But where the Manson~inspired maelstrom of “Death Valley ’69” seemed to add another gallon of piss onto the grave of the hippie dream, the content and iconography of Sonic Youth’s subsequent work suggested they were secretly mourning it.
♣   The inner~sleeve artwork for 1986’s EVOL found Thurston Moore posing like a flower child with a sitar, while a scrawled crucifix insignia — emblazoned with the words “Sonic Life” — evoked the DIY religiosity of West Coast free~love cults. And with 1987’s Sister, Sonic Youth produced the most Californian album in their canon, from the desecrated Disneyland photo on the cover to the specific geographic references, not to mention the song that proved to be the closest Gordon and Moore would ever get to their own “I Got You Babe.” After flirting with mainstream success in the early 1990s, Sonic Youth more or less carried themselves as a post~punk Grateful Dead, becoming a modern paragon of hippie~era artistic freedom but without the incense, hacky sacks, and wavy~arm dancing.
♣   This summer marks the 30th anniversary of Sister, but in lieu of a big deluxe reissue campaign, Moore has surfaced with a solo record that similarly exhibits outer aggression as a means to achieve inner bliss. While Moore’s most recent work has seen him unleash his latent activist streak, Rock n Roll Consciousness uses its noisy guitar jams as battering rams to access more intimate, spiritual modes of expression. The title is no misnomer — on Rock n Roll Consciousness, Moore is consciously rocking, with the returning cast of guitarist James Sedwards, My Bloody Valentine bassist Debbie Googe, and Sonic Youth drummer Steve Shelley further solidifying the groundwork they laid on 2014’s The Best Day. But that sturdy foundation gives Moore the confidence to let his head float evermore freely into the clouds, atop some of the most joyous, optimistic lyrics he’s ever sung.
♣   Rock n Roll Consciousness is an album about love — if not an album of love songs per se. Moore isn’t singing to his girlfriend here —he’s addressing mythical goddesses and the mystique of big cities at night and the changing of the seasons. Like The Best Day, the new record features lyrical contributions from London poet Radio Radieux, whose cosmic vocabulary — with its references to “the prophetess,” “peyote walkers,” “magic drums,” and “vibration love” — allows Moore to mine the ecstatic without losing his ageless, dead~cool drawl.
♣   But if the album’s lyrics project a certain youthful idealism, musically, Moore and co. proudly dig their worn~out Converse heels into an indie~is~the~new~dad~rock ethos that trades in Sonic Youth’s abstract extremes for a tougher, more propulsive thrust. It’s more meat~and~potatoes, sure, but it’s really choice grass~fed beef with yam flan. “Exalted” unfurls like the Feelies playing at 16 rpm, before Sedwards starts channeling J Mascis channeling Eddie Hazel on what sounds like a meditative rendition of Neil Young’s “Like a Hurricane.” This melancholic reverie is rudely interrupted by a doom~metal drone that hits like a flaming gong crash, blazing the trail for Moore’s star~struck vocal to finally come in just before the eight~minute mark. “Aphrodite,” meanwhile, feels like an entire song spun out of the staccato, pin~pricked climax to “Marquee Moon,” until Googe’s hypnotic bass breakdown goads Moore and Sedwards to engage in some wah~wah warfare.
♣   Where The Best Day proffered a somewhat uneven mix of extended odysseys and rough~hewn sketches, Rock n Roll Consciousness is much more cohesive and smoothly sequenced. Its five tracks (averaging eight minutes a piece) feel like carefully plotted epics rather than improvised excursions; the revved~p 10~minute thriller “Turn On,” in particular, is packed with hairpin twists and turns. But Moore can also reach euphoric peaks through a more direct route. “Cusp” — a cloud~parting ode to the coming of spring — is six~and~a~half sustained minutes of shimmering jangle and steady, shuffling rhythm. The song is simultaneously frantic and soothing; like a jogging~on~the~spot exercise, the surroundings may not change, but by the end, your heart is pounding and you feel light~headed. It’s the moment where this album’s core philosophies achieve their purest physical manifestation. As Moore would attest, rock’n’roll — like love itself — should instill a higher state of consciousness, while at the same time make you feel like you’re losing it.   ♣   http://pitchfork.com/ 

Fotka uživatele Ben Tais Amundssen.                                                                         © Thurston Moore Band 2014.
Review
Raymond Cummings // April 27, 2017
♣   In the wake of 1995’s Psychic Hearts — a sinewy, endless grab~bag — Thurston Moore’s singer~songwriter albums strained to find an identity independent of Sonic Youth. This was a process. Moore was Moore, after all: a smart~ass, a downtown counterculture iconoclast, a walking music encyclopedia prone to punctuating guitar eruptions and searing feedback. A more refined version of this persona was pursued for 2007’s Trees Outside the Academy, but as with Hearts, it wound up in a scattered place. 2011’s Demolished Thoughts burst into a startlingly hushed, wistful zone that 2014’s The Best Day co~opted only briefly when Moore wasn’t (once again) covering his multi~aesthetic spread.
♣   We couldn’t have known that Day instrumental “Grace Lake” would preview Moore’s reinvention and reorientation on Rock’N’Roll Consciousness, his most concise, transportive record to date. The keys to Consciousness’ triumph: fewer songs, fewer vocals, way, way more gorgeous guitar work. Day contributor/poet Radio Radieux again supplements Moore’s own woke mystic sage lyricism, but this time their sentiments exist to tee up or sign~post adventures for Moore and his road~tested lineup of bassist Deb Googe, guitarist James Sedwards, and drummer Steve Shelley.
♣   The quartet employ a patient, almost surreptitious pacing that makes the multiple metamorphoses these songs undergo equally as surprising on the first listen as the fifteenth. “Turn On” ambles into being, accelerates, tosses off a few verses, then marvelously crests, careening through and exploiting every aspect of its sprawling core melodies; it’s playful yet emotionally expressive, a premeditated yet free~wheeling joyousness that is somehow Consciousness’ prime directive.
♣   One can hear this, too, in Googe’s incisive bassline anchoring “Aphrodite,” in the carefully deployed bursts of spazzed~out noise guitar, in how the band mischievously depresses the brakes. “Smoke of Dreams” spends its midsection unfurling a Sedwards guitar solo so mesmerizingly rendered that it should be hanging on a gallery wall; the martial “Cusp” moves at a more crisp, threshing tempo, giving way, eventually, to annihilating distortion. As journeys go, it sounds like Moore’s reached a happy place.
♣   http://www.spin.com/
By Aidan Reynolds April 27th, 2017 //  Score: 8
≡    This is why Rock n Roll Consciousness is more valuable than The Best Day — it’s a body of work that exists apart from Moore’s previous output, dedicating itself to new ideas and the exploration of how he fits within them. This continues where ‘Forevermore’ left off, bringing post~rock to the fore and keeping lyrical contributions from becoming too intrusive. Aside from pre~release track ‘Smoke of Dreams’, there’s nothing here that could be comfortably categorised as a song, and even that is over six minutes and allows itself a meandering solo that conjures both Dinosaur Jr and Hendrix psychedelia. (excerpt)
♣   http://drownedinsound.com/releases/19909/reviews/4150981
Words: Josh Gray / Score: 8/10
♣   http://www.clashmusic.com/reviews/thurston-moore-rock-n-roll-consciousness
AllMusic Review by Heather Phares;  Score: ***½
♣   http://www.allmusic.com/album/rock-n-roll-consciousness-mw0003032379
Website: https://www.thurstonmoore.com/
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Thurston Moore Rock’N’Roll Consciousness

ALBUM COVERS XI.