Home
the Besnard Lakes Are Dark Horse
Barnes and Noble
the Besnard Lakes Are Dark Horse
Current price: $15.99
Barnes and Noble
the Besnard Lakes Are Dark Horse
Current price: $15.99
Size: CD
Loading Inventory...
*Product information may vary - to confirm product availability, pricing, shipping and return information please contact Barnes and Noble
The Montreal-based husband-and-wife duo of
the Besnard Lakes
really work some of the old yin-and-yang magic on their debut release
The Besnard Lakes Are the Dark Horse
. Throughout the eight tracks, the push-and-pull of crunchy guitars versus delicate, stringy instrumentation seems to reflect the dynamic between
Olga Goreas
and
Jace Lasek
themselves (with wife
Goreas
, seemingly the prime instigator for the power chords). It's a slightly indulgent affair, but the only way to get these seemingly disparate qualities to play nice on an album together is to sweat over it -- and sweat they did, but not on somebody else's timecard. Utilizing their own studio,
Lasek
could, and did, take plenty of time getting their vision to come through in the mixes, and the ebb-and-flow between abrasive and lilting isn't half as jarring as you might think. It's like a
Beach Boys
album when it's calm and a
Queen
album when it's crunchy, but all filtered through what must be one hell of a record collection over at the
-
homestead. ~ J. Scott McClintock
the Besnard Lakes
really work some of the old yin-and-yang magic on their debut release
The Besnard Lakes Are the Dark Horse
. Throughout the eight tracks, the push-and-pull of crunchy guitars versus delicate, stringy instrumentation seems to reflect the dynamic between
Olga Goreas
and
Jace Lasek
themselves (with wife
Goreas
, seemingly the prime instigator for the power chords). It's a slightly indulgent affair, but the only way to get these seemingly disparate qualities to play nice on an album together is to sweat over it -- and sweat they did, but not on somebody else's timecard. Utilizing their own studio,
Lasek
could, and did, take plenty of time getting their vision to come through in the mixes, and the ebb-and-flow between abrasive and lilting isn't half as jarring as you might think. It's like a
Beach Boys
album when it's calm and a
Queen
album when it's crunchy, but all filtered through what must be one hell of a record collection over at the
-
homestead. ~ J. Scott McClintock