Compare S-M Backwards
Barnes and Noble
$34.99
's 2005 debut album was an impressive work of neo-shoegaze, neo-noise rock that seemed to come out of nowhere -- unless you lived in Norway or were hip enough to hear either of the two EPs that preceded the record, that is. Released in 2002, caught a lighter, less epic-sounding band able to rip off a super pretty pop song like choogle through the tough rocker or drift through the spacy like a disciple of . Only on did they hint at the noise explosion that would soon follow. Mostly the group sounded like a sprightly, good-natured version of , which is not a bad goal at all. , though it came out after , contained material recorded between 1999 and 2003. It also showcased a less focused, more experimental side of the band; from the ambient soundscape of and the dreamlike haze of (both recorded in 2001) to the noisy recorded-in-one-raw-take and the droning but lovely the band seemed less interested in crafting songs than in creating sound and mood. Put the two EPs together and you have a pretty good template for the album that followed. In 2008 released , a double-disc set housing both EPs plus bonus mixes of many of the songs and an unreleased track, the creepy and atmospheric The mixes are interesting but not revelatory. cleans up and adds some sparkle to the duo of and give a sheen and rough up with some truly ugly guitar sounds, and stretches into an epic-length ambient guitar jam. The mixes are a nice addition, but the two EPs could really stand on their own as twin building blocks of the sound. has done fans of the band and of the modern shoegaze sound a huge favor by putting them together and putting them out, extras or no. ~ Tim Sendra