... Album of the month ...
Plowing into the Field of Love is the third album from Copenhagen’s ICEAGE. It is new, bold and forceful.
Channeling the rage and emotion of their tempestuous early releases
into finely honed musicianship, Plowing Into The Field of Love features
piano, mandolin, viola and organ atop Johan Suurballe-Wieth’s
razor-sharp guitars and the lolloping, synchronized rhythm section of
Jacob Tvilling Pless and Dan Kjær Nielsen. The record has a clear,
uncompressed sound, and Elias Bender Rønnenfelt’s desperate vocals are
out front, nakedly accountable for the words.
At the other extreme, the album tends to a sort of euphoria,
especially in the unexpectedly upbeat country number “The Lord’s
Favorite,” and even humor. Yet desperation and loss lurks behind. This
is an album about seeing, learning, and rejecting things, in a cycle
that repeats and builds. The reference points are wildly varied - on a
recent German radio show, the band played records by Abner Jay, Rowland
S. Howard, Brian Eno, and Coil - but the sound is uniquely and darkly
Iceage.
Oct 7, 2014
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