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Cast From the Platform
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Cast From the Platform
Current price: $15.99
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Barnes and Noble
Cast From the Platform
Current price: $15.99
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Alone I Admire
,
Auburn Lull
's wonderful debut, was easily one of the more accomplished
ambient
rock
albums. Drifting slowly along, it painted dreamy imagery of desert sands, grassy fields and falling snow. After five years, the eagerly awaited follow-up could have gone in a new direction, but the Michigan quartet (with help from
Andrew Prinz
of
dream pop
band
Mahogany
) plays it safe with another dose of peaceful atmospherics.
Cast from the Platform
, however, lacks the grandiose crescendos found on its predecessor, instead relying on textures and effects (for good measure, the band partially recorded in an echo chamber and grain silo). While those elements are beautiful, it doesn't create glorious, individual moments. As a whole, it's still sublime with a slew of magical guitar effects and whispery vocals which few other bands have mastered. Here's hoping we don't have to wait another five years for
's next installment. ~ Kenyon Hopkin
,
Auburn Lull
's wonderful debut, was easily one of the more accomplished
ambient
rock
albums. Drifting slowly along, it painted dreamy imagery of desert sands, grassy fields and falling snow. After five years, the eagerly awaited follow-up could have gone in a new direction, but the Michigan quartet (with help from
Andrew Prinz
of
dream pop
band
Mahogany
) plays it safe with another dose of peaceful atmospherics.
Cast from the Platform
, however, lacks the grandiose crescendos found on its predecessor, instead relying on textures and effects (for good measure, the band partially recorded in an echo chamber and grain silo). While those elements are beautiful, it doesn't create glorious, individual moments. As a whole, it's still sublime with a slew of magical guitar effects and whispery vocals which few other bands have mastered. Here's hoping we don't have to wait another five years for
's next installment. ~ Kenyon Hopkin