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Two is a very rare commodity, a relentlessly alternative, radical album that does not strive to please anyone: not the Midwest nostalgics, not the new wave throwing panties at Touché Amoré and La Dispute, not the Joan Of Arc fans (because they practically don’t exist, otherwise, a little bit to them); not those craving for a second coming of American Football, who meanwhile rightly self-celebrate, merchandise, and monetize the glories of the nineties; not even the post-rockers and mathematicians, because that is a crowd seeking sound and instead, this is a skeletal, direct, barely seasoned album. Discover the review
Two is a very rare commodity, a relentlessly alternative, radical album that does not strive to please anyone: not the Midwest nostalgics, not the new wave throwing panties at Touché Amoré and La Dispute, not the Joan Of Arc fans (because they practically don’t exist, otherwise, a little bit to them); not those craving for a second coming of American Football, who meanwhile rightly self-celebrate, merchandise, and monetize the glories of the nineties; not even the post-rockers and mathematicians, because that is a crowd seeking sound and instead, this is a skeletal, direct, barely seasoned album.
The Kinsella brothers never stopped believing in that fleeting and passionate epic called Cap'n Jazz. Discover the review
The Kinsella brothers never stopped believing in that fleeting and passionate epic called Cap'n Jazz.
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