
Waxahatchee Cerulean Salt Vinyl LP Indies Cerulean Blue Colour 2024
Cerulean Blue Colour Vinyl
Tracklist:
1. Hollow Bedroom
2. Dixie Cups and Jars
3. Lips and Limbs
4. Blue Pt. II
5. Brother Bryan
6. Coast to Coast
7. Tangled Envisioning
8. Misery Over Dispute
9. Lively
10. Waiting
11. Swan Dive
12. Peace and Quiet
13. You're Damaged
Waxahatchee re-emerges as a full on indie rock star on Cerulean Salt, crafting songs with small flourishes and delicate melodies that work around a proper band structure. The same emotions of relationship grief resonate as did on the sparse American Weekend, but this record shows a maturer and more precise songwriter.
At times, Cerulean Salt creeps closer to the sound of PS Eliot: moody, 90s-inspired rock backed by Keith Spencer and Swearinâ guitarist Kyle Gilbride on drums and bass. The full band means fleshed-out fuzzy lead guitars on âCoast to Coastâ, its poppy hook almost masking its dark lyrics. Big distorted guitars and deep steady drums mark songs like âMisery over Disputeâ and âWaitingâ.
Thereâs plenty of American Weekendâs introspection and minimalism to be found, though. âBlue Pt. IIâ is stripped down, Crutchfield and her sister Alison singing in harmony with deadpan vox. Sheâs still an open booking, musing on self-doubt versus self-reliance, transience versus permanence. âPeace and Quietâ ebbs and flows from moody, minimal verses to a sing-song chorus. âSwan Diveâ tackles nostalgia, transience, indifference, regret â over the a minimal strum of an electric-guitar, the picking at a chirpy riff and the double-time tapping of a muted drum. The album closes with a haunting acoustic-guitar reflection on âYouâre Damaged,â possibly the best Waxahatchee song to date.
Waxahatchee Cerulean Salt Vinyl LP Indies Cerulean Blue Colour 2024
Cerulean Blue Colour Vinyl
Tracklist:
1. Hollow Bedroom
2. Dixie Cups and Jars
3. Lips and Limbs
4. Blue Pt. II
5. Brother Bryan
6. Coast to Coast
7. Tangled Envisioning
8. Misery Over Dispute
9. Lively
10. Waiting
11. Swan Dive
12. Peace and Quiet
13. You're Damaged
Waxahatchee re-emerges as a full on indie rock star on Cerulean Salt, crafting songs with small flourishes and delicate melodies that work around a proper band structure. The same emotions of relationship grief resonate as did on the sparse American Weekend, but this record shows a maturer and more precise songwriter.
At times, Cerulean Salt creeps closer to the sound of PS Eliot: moody, 90s-inspired rock backed by Keith Spencer and Swearinâ guitarist Kyle Gilbride on drums and bass. The full band means fleshed-out fuzzy lead guitars on âCoast to Coastâ, its poppy hook almost masking its dark lyrics. Big distorted guitars and deep steady drums mark songs like âMisery over Disputeâ and âWaitingâ.
Thereâs plenty of American Weekendâs introspection and minimalism to be found, though. âBlue Pt. IIâ is stripped down, Crutchfield and her sister Alison singing in harmony with deadpan vox. Sheâs still an open booking, musing on self-doubt versus self-reliance, transience versus permanence. âPeace and Quietâ ebbs and flows from moody, minimal verses to a sing-song chorus. âSwan Diveâ tackles nostalgia, transience, indifference, regret â over the a minimal strum of an electric-guitar, the picking at a chirpy riff and the double-time tapping of a muted drum. The album closes with a haunting acoustic-guitar reflection on âYouâre Damaged,â possibly the best Waxahatchee song to date.
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Cerulean Blue Colour Vinyl
Tracklist:
1. Hollow Bedroom
2. Dixie Cups and Jars
3. Lips and Limbs
4. Blue Pt. II
5. Brother Bryan
6. Coast to Coast
7. Tangled Envisioning
8. Misery Over Dispute
9. Lively
10. Waiting
11. Swan Dive
12. Peace and Quiet
13. You're Damaged
Waxahatchee re-emerges as a full on indie rock star on Cerulean Salt, crafting songs with small flourishes and delicate melodies that work around a proper band structure. The same emotions of relationship grief resonate as did on the sparse American Weekend, but this record shows a maturer and more precise songwriter.
At times, Cerulean Salt creeps closer to the sound of PS Eliot: moody, 90s-inspired rock backed by Keith Spencer and Swearinâ guitarist Kyle Gilbride on drums and bass. The full band means fleshed-out fuzzy lead guitars on âCoast to Coastâ, its poppy hook almost masking its dark lyrics. Big distorted guitars and deep steady drums mark songs like âMisery over Disputeâ and âWaitingâ.
Thereâs plenty of American Weekendâs introspection and minimalism to be found, though. âBlue Pt. IIâ is stripped down, Crutchfield and her sister Alison singing in harmony with deadpan vox. Sheâs still an open booking, musing on self-doubt versus self-reliance, transience versus permanence. âPeace and Quietâ ebbs and flows from moody, minimal verses to a sing-song chorus. âSwan Diveâ tackles nostalgia, transience, indifference, regret â over the a minimal strum of an electric-guitar, the picking at a chirpy riff and the double-time tapping of a muted drum. The album closes with a haunting acoustic-guitar reflection on âYouâre Damaged,â possibly the best Waxahatchee song to date.












