Cover of lobsterfight pink, black, and orange in the corners.
kloo

• Rating:

For fans of indie rock, lovers of emo and shoegaze, listeners interested in experimental and post-ism genres, and those intrigued by pandemic-inspired music
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LA RECENSIONE

We are in a happy stagnation, a love for retromania and pleasant artistic multiformism.
Once upon a time, it was Vampire Weekend mixing the appropriate, now that we are heading towards mid-century, it's right to mix the inappropriate:
If on the surface, especially in the UK, we see post-isms dominating the scene, in the United States directions have already gone beyond:
If midwest emo and east coast experimentation, if slowcore and plunderphonics, and then noise, shoegaze, and even the aforementioned post-isms become an indigestible mess, we still haven't understood anything.

pink, black and orange.
Cap' n' Jazz, Brave Little Abacus, American Football. Beloved Elverum, something that might remind one of Animal Collective.

Internet and the Pandemic, the isolation has led (me) to evaluate rock and punk experimentalisms differently in a positive light, solidifying the auditory taste buds and the taste for abrasions and the fresh fissures of my being.

I suggest.
https://lobsterfight.bandcamp.com/album/pink-black-and-orange-in-the-corners

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Summary by Bot

Lobsterfight’s album 'pink, black and orange in the corners' delivers a compelling blend of indie rock influences, including emo, shoegaze, and experimental sounds. The review highlights a shift beyond typical post-isms, appreciating the album’s eclectic and challenging mix. Inspired by pandemic isolation, the album resonates with fresh creativity and artistic abrasion. Recommended for listeners with refined taste for musical experimentation.

Tracklist

01   =0 (03:16)

02   II (02:35)

03   III (01:41)

04   Moonpie! (Biggerstaff) (02:59)

06   Untitled (01:34)

07   Frog (12:25)

08   Short Song (01:37)

lobsterfight

Lobsterfight is an artist whose work blends midwest emo, slowcore, plunderphonics, noise and shoegaze; DeBaser's coverage focuses on the album pink, black, and orange in the corners.
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