Cover of Ride Tomorrow's Shore EP
GrantNicholas

• Rating:

For fans of ride, lovers of shoegaze and indie rock, listeners interested in modern synth-driven music, followers of british alternative bands
 Share

THE REVIEW

In 2017, Ride marked their grand return after twenty-one years with a great album like "Weather Diaries."

An album that redefined their sound, shaping and molding it according to more current standards, but without losing its essence. Despite this, the departure from certain shoegaze stereotypes was already very evident, even though those sounds had not been completely abandoned yet; the band's intent, even shortly before their 1996 breakup, was already this—though back then, the attempt had proven clumsy and disastrous. Now, with the full center of "Weather Diaries," Bell, Gardener, and their fellows can truly take their first steps toward the future in a more secure and stable manner.

The first taste is this four-piece EP christened "Tomorrow's Shore," produced and mixed by the same team as the preceding album (the tracks come precisely from those sessions and were likely excluded due to excessive heterogeneity with the rest of the project); thus, we find the trusted DJ Erol Alkan and Alan Moulder. These are tracks that take a decisive step toward the future, significantly diversifying the British band's offerings.

And it's an extremely evident turning point right from the single "Pulsar," a track almost entirely built on a hammering and violent synth that recalls the early works of MGMT as well as the more recent M83. The subsequent "Keep It Surreal" is thoroughly completed indie rock that thickens as the track progresses, somewhat in the manner of Blur's old "Bugman."

The pace slows down with the Floydian "Cold Water People," perhaps the most ambitious track on the EP, which leads us into the excellent (and concluding) "Catch You Dreaming," sinuous and expansive, perhaps the most "updated" track to certain sounds currently in vogue (instantly bringing to mind Tame Impala).

"Tomorrow's Shore" is a delightful appetizer of what's to come, a way for Ride to outline four possible future scenarios: one of these might be the right one. Or, why not, even all four. The difficult judgment awaits the next album.

Best track: Pulsar

Loading comments  slowly

Summary by Bot

Ride’s Tomorrow’s Shore EP builds on the sound reshaped in their 2017 comeback album, Weather Diaries. It boldly experiments with synth-heavy indie rock, showcasing influences from MGMT, M83, Blur, and Tame Impala. The EP acts as a teaser for the band’s future direction, offering four distinct musical scenarios. It stands out as a confident, polished step forward with standout track 'Pulsar.'

Ride

Ride are an English shoegaze band formed in Oxford in 1988 by Mark Gardener, Andy Bell, Steve Queralt and Loz Colbert. Signed to Creation Records, they helped define the genre with Nowhere (1990) and Going Blank Again (1992), split in 1996 after Tarantula, and reunited in 2014 to release Weather Diaries (2017), This Is Not a Safe Place (2019) and Interplay (2024).
08 Reviews