BEIRUT – Gulag Orkestar – LP – POMP005

33,44 

A1 / The Gulag Orkestar / 4:38
A2 / Prenzlauerberg / 3:46
A3 / Brandenburg / 3:38
A4 / Postcards From Italy / 4:17
A5 / Mount Wroclai (Idle Days) / 3:15
B1 / Rhineland (Heartland) / 3:58
B2 / Scenic World / 2:08
B3 / Bratislava / 3:17
B4 / The Bunker / 3:13
B5 / The Canals Of Our City / 2:21
B6 / After The Curtain / 2:54

Disponível por encomenda a fornecedor

My grandparents were Russian immigrants who spent their lives working in factories; when they got too old for that, they graduated to the cafeteria of a Queens high school. Visiting them as a kid, the thick accents of their incomprehensible language were, to me, the music of the so-called “motherland.” When grandpa was spinning records, though, he opted for melancholic horns and voices or polka. He may have dug Gulag Orkestar, the debut album by Zach Condon aka Beirut.

Beirut’s received quite a bit of pre-release buzz. He deserves some of it. His tuneful Balkan stomp is fairly unique within the indie realm, an aesthetic shared with Man Man, Gogol Bordello, and Barbez but few others. That, and for a 19-year-old from Albuquerque (now living in Brooklyn), he sounds like an old man sipping vodka and humming along to Tchaikovsky while the neighborhood kids play stick ball or drink egg creams. The sound is there, but beneath the atmospherics his themes of war, fallen curtains, bunkers, life on the Rhine — his song titles are more fixated on Germany (and Slovakia and an imaginary Eastern Bloc) than Russia — and Gulags, are vague and sometimes less than effective.

Brandon Stosuy / Pitchfork

Peso
500 g

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