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Gaggle – From The Mouth Of The Cave

Album review

Four years after forming, and a European tour of opera The Brilliant And The Dark later, comes ‘From The Mouth of the Cave’. It’s no surprise that Gaggle’s debut has taken so long to come around. Managing four members is usually enough, let alone twenty one.

With touches of the likes of Gang Gang Dance and Tune-Yards throughout, the tribalist element keeps them engaging if the songs themselves aren’t always ace. The main issue here is that you can’t actually tell it’s twenty one voices. Whether that’s because of the production technique or due to the age of the condensed MP3 sound the breadth of the choir isn’t captured.

Decent record, with a couple of fillers. But go see them live if you want to capture what Gaggle are really about.

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Being There - Breaking Away

Being There - Breaking Away
Inspired by the feeling "where you are a graduate but can’t find a job and are stuck at home again dreaming of escape" young upstarts Being There blast away the feel of the burbs with a collection of hi-octane, lo-fi guitar tracks out of town. Heavily honing the spirit of Teenage Fanclub along with noted inspirations such as The Replacements, the four piece have taken on the less-is-more approach with full accuracy. Only one track breaks the three and a half minute mark, which is refreshing at a time when artists can sometimes dawdle. The first half of the album definitely has a more instantly engaging, stomping motion. The last half sees the boys go a bit slow motion. But no worries, there's plenty of solid song writing here to get these guys a hard fan base, and on that basis, 'Breaking Away' is well worth checking out. The sound of escape rarely sounds so promising.
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