The earliest experiments of "shoe-fixing" can be found in "69" by A.R. Kane, where the birth of a new trend can be clearly heard.
In the end, each genre is boxed into its own coordinates... there are some sounds that encompass a vast landscape, but certain stylistic elements seem to be an end in themselves. They, along with My Bloody Valentine and Jesus & Mary Chain, manage to break through without being mere meteors, which is already quite something. But class, intuition, foresight, and flair are the components that always ensure great things.
The debut of '91 is the boom of their conception, confirmed in the surprising single "Catch The Breeze." It is paired with another truly excellent song, "Shine," which also has that lovely springtime video.
The stasis, the ethereal sound that captures us from the start, and the perpetually suspended voice are the cornerstones of the Reading combo. "Souvlaki" and "Pygmalion," the latter with the stunning "Crazy For You," are the gems that extend the band's vitality until 1995.
The dreamlike, hypnotic progression of "Catch The Breeze" delights us for a few minutes. Their sound journeys are always a few minutes, given that their offering is always remarkable and intriguing.
The finale is a dance of synths, frequencies, waves, and breezes. A lunar landscape that captivates us even with "Shine." We can define it as a soft ballet seasoned by the nebula created by the flow of just-whispered words by Goswell. It is neither the Cocteau’s warbling nor the "off-key" whisper of the My Bloody.
A celestial air colored by intangible vocal melodies.
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