With a name like
Slowness, it's hard not to make comparisons to Slowdive,
but strangest of all was that until now, their music wasn't actually
particularly slow. However, after a five-year wait for a new album
that sounds distinctly downbeat, they've finally managed to make good
on their name. I got a chance to listen to their new album ahead of
its official release, so I'll report what I've heard.
Artist: Slowness
Album: Berths
Release Date: 7 June
2019
Label: Schoolkids
Records
Producer: Monte Vallier
Tracklist:
01. The Fall
02. Rose
03. Berlin
04. Breathe
05. Sand & Stone
06. Asunder
01. The Fall
02. Rose
03. Berlin
04. Breathe
05. Sand & Stone
06. Asunder
The first single from
Berths, "Rose", is a bit deceptive. It shines with
an expansive brightness that doesn't sound too far off from the more
conventional shoegaze sound of Slowness' earlier albums. The layers
of guitars and harmonies certainly sound familiar. But instead of
pulsing, grooving, noisy thickness, "Rose" builds up a
field of sound based more around reverb and open space. It's pretty,
but there are shades of ponderous darkness.
The second single,
"Berlin", loses most of the optimism. The simple but
angular guitar riffs, the triangle and rolling toms, and the wispy
vocals and synthesizers come across like an overcast sky threatening
to rain. Instead of some techno party or metaphor of occupation or
reunification, the song appears to be a comparison of the political
changes of 1930s Germany to the modern USA. It doesn't sound very
encouraging.
The rest of the album
is closer to "Berlin" than to "Rose". "The
Fall" begins the album with a lengthy haze of guitars and then
opens up with a slow beat, a looming, spindly guitar part, and
stacked harmonies. Bursts of guitar sound like lightning, and the
subtle synthesizer could be a persistent drizzle. The lyrics seem to
describe the hopeless inevitability of the changing of the seasons.
The second half of the
album is even slower and darker. "Breathe" is edgy,
aggressive, and weighted down. "Sand & Stone" is
somewhat more peaceful and relaxed, but still foreboding. Most of the
song forms an instrumental, enveloping pillow of noise. It slowly
separates and fades out in sections such that the listener gets a
peak behind the curtain of how the soundscapes are put together.
"Asunder" is funereal to the point of being reminiscent of
The
Cure's "Faith". It's the only song where Julie Lynn's
voice dominates, but with lyrics like "All is lost / No wonder",
it's no more uplifting than the rest of the album.
With six tracks and
only 32 minutes of music, Berths
is rather slight, but it feels like the exact opposite. Gone are the
upbeat, sparkling
elements of their previous albums. This album feels heavy and
brooding. "Anon, Pt. IV" (from How to Keep from
Falling Off a Mountain, 2014)
and "Little King" (from the Hopeless but
Otherwise EP, 2011) are the
closest touchpoints from Slowness' past work. Both are a bit slower
and downbeat, but neither are as doom-laden as anything from Berths.
The only exception may be "Rose", but
even that is still far off from
the pure, massive beauty of "Walls of Blue" (from For
Those Who Wish to See the Glass Half Full,
2013).
Nonetheless,
there is something cleansing about the change of pace. I applaud that
the band chose to branch out into a new direction, and I've picked up
that they were trying to write something that suited the spirit of
the times. Slowness have let
their sound open up in a way that I wouldn't have expected. There's
something subtle yet still large and moving in Berths.
Maybe it's the omnipresent soundbed of effects and noise, or maybe
it's the layers of harmonies, or maybe it's the simple yet
foregrounded lead guitar lines. It feels deliberate and studied. It
feels like it might be storming now, but that can't last forever.
Score: B
P.S.
Here's hoping they make it to Berlin on their next tour!
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