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Two Medicine - Astropsychosis on CD
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Two Medicine - Astropsychosis on CD

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Format: CD |

Description

"I'd always wanted Midlake to experiment more with the arrangements, or to get more into psychedelic textures," says Paul Alexander, the bassist from Denton's prog-folk voyagers. Those ambitions are fulfilled on Astropsychosis, Alexander's debut album as Two Medicine, released via Bella Union in November. Richly ambitious in its sonic colour and conceptual reach, Astropsychosis is an album of luminous space and mindful grace, its depths and details coaxed into orbit with the lightness of an artist in his element.As Paul explains, one key to its secrets lies in the project name's nod to a national park in Montana: "Two Medicine is a majestic place, without spoil. The land was ceded to the nation by the Blackfeet tribe. They were likely coerced into the deal, like most of the tribes who gave away their land. It is wild, humbling and probably collateral for the nation's debt, where an inevitable capitulation looms. Beyond its geographical location, to me, the name Two Medicine represents a summation of this irony, whether created or inherited by the people of the United States."Hints of these thoughts emerge on "SF", where mellifluous chimes, multi-tracked chorales, warm keys and a dream-pop bass-line provide warm bedding for a lamentation of something lost, the cost of such suggested in deathly images. If it seems like an enquiry into the high price of spiritual neglect, such is Paul's intent: "One of the central themes is material and spiritual consequence, for myself, the US, and the world as a whole.""Oblivion" picks up the thread of dread with its haunted harps and misty vocals framing references to sacred summonings and bloodied swords. Sunshine keys and dreamy rhythms counterpoint reflections on darkening times in "Will Not", while "Gold" is a glistening beauty, laced with rays of hope; "An Eye for an I", meanwhile, revisits themes of consequence over sci-fi synths and a scudding space-pop bassline. While the title-track sees the crimes of an unnamed "dope" held to account, the dreamier "Kuopio" points to mindful ways of living, humbled before nature and open to mystery. If hope is suggested therein, it's a theme revisited on "tmrw", which steers the album full circle: from its opening reflections on things past, to a tentative glance at the future. "Tomorrow," Paul asks, "what then?"

TRACKS

SF
Oblivion
Will Not
Voice
Gold
An Eye For An I
Astropsychosis
Kuopio
tmrw

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