I'm pissed off. Sleeping is out of the question, clearly. It's too late to seek comfort from a friend and too early to tell everyone to fuck off for no reason: I might wake them up the wrong way and they could beat me to it. I go to the bathroom, sit on the white armchair, and learn about the prime minister's death while flipping through a newspaper: "Damn, come on, no. I'm not in the mood for news." Surprised by my reaction, everything becomes clearer: nostalgia moment. I head quickly and methodically somewhere, repeatedly asking myself what this "nostalgia moment" was supposed to be. In short, I find myself in the bedroom. In front of me, the dusty shelf with a label saying "nostalgia."

I pick a random record, and it's exactly what I was searching for without knowing it. The first The Ecstasy of Saint Theresa. An EP from a Czech duo who turned to ambient-whatever once they completed their first real full-length (titled "Sussurrate," dated 1992) released a year after this "Pigment." I start writing about it incessantly. I have many things to say while listening to them. I write skillfully and without pause.

[...] Apparently, they are appreciated (alas, only? More than anything?) in their alternative journey (beside their already figuratively alternative path). They vaguely remind one of Portishead. Let them go on MyDeb! I preferred them in this EP. I preferred them here, when they combined industrial quantities of shoegaze nostalgia with the most chaotic indie tradition. When those four intense, live tracks - from "What's" to "Honeyrain," via "Who's" and the linked "Square Wave" (also featured in the limited edition compilation "The Noise and the Melodies" of 1993) - represented an excellent calling card and helped you forget everything. Even that the prime minister is still alive or that you can't write exactly like Dante. Wake up, fool!

Heavens!

Tracklist and Videos

01   What's (02:14)

02   Square Wave (03:43)

03   Who's (03:29)

04   Honeyrain (03:47)

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