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Label:HFN Music
Cat-No:kds012
Release-Date:15.11.2019
Configuration:LP Excl
Barcode:4250382438021
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Last in:28.10.2019
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backorder
Last in:28.10.2019
Label:HFN Music
Cat-No:kds012
Release-Date:15.11.2019
Configuration:LP Excl
Barcode:4250382438021
1
Lights Fluorescent - The Oldest Sons Of The Oldest Sons
2
Lights Fluorescent - Our Earlier Years
3
Lights Fluorescent - Space Metal
4
Lights Fluorescent - Palace Walls
5
Lights Fluorescent - Epitaphs
6
Lights Fluorescent - Hotels
7
Lights Fluorescent - Neil Young/Cues
8
Lights Fluorescent - Small Sacrifices
9
Lights Fluorescent - J Girls
10
Lights Fluorescent - July 9th
LP + mp3

Tracklist:
A1 The Oldest Sons Of The Oldest Sons
A2. Our Earlier Years
A3. Space Metal
A4. Palace Walls
A5. Epitaphs
B1. Hotels
B2. Neil Young/Cues
B3. Small Sacrifices
B4. J Girls
B5. July 9th

Release Info:
Made up of Dave Harrington (Darkside/Dave Harrington Group) and Benjamin Jay (NDF/Benoit & Sergio), Lights Fluorescent is, as the two describe it, an ‘experiment in the spaces between song and texture, idea and reference, past and present.’ On their debut album, The Oldest Sons Of The Oldest Sons, the duo develops an atmospheric, slant-pop sensibility that lists toward the experimental tendencies of improvisational and ambient music.
The result is a set of songs meant to be lived with. Entirely percussion-less, recordings drift on a tenderness of guitar, revenant feedback and vocals of autumnal intimation. Space Metal and July 9th process layers of bespoke noise and washed out chords to tarry with integral depth, light, and shadow, while Hotels distills country-western longing into its nth dimensional essence always unrequited.
From within these sonic panoramas, vocals emerge more as watercolor traces than coarse etchings. They aim to capture evocative, lyrical intensities, eschewing the solace of the literal. As such, the album favors 'the gestural, the implicit, and the miniature over the more adolescent urges of grand narratives and epic.’ These preferences map onto the album in all of its moves. J Girls reveals a hint of story buried, like its context, deep in whorls of feedback. Fleeting images of monuments, cathedrals, or epitaphs on tracks like Palace Walls or Small Sacrifices speak to a sense of memory and community paradoxically ungrounded by the material instantiations meant to keep things in place.


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