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Adult Jazz - So Sorry So Slow (2024) [Official Digital Download]

Posted By: delpotro
Adult Jazz - So Sorry So Slow (2024) [Official Digital Download]

Adult Jazz - So Sorry So Slow (2024)
FLAC (tracks) 24-bit/44,1 kHz | Front Cover | Time - 62:02 minutes | 648 MB
Art Pop, Indie Pop | Label: Spare Thought, Official Digital Download

London-based four-piece Adult Jazz release their first full-length album in a decade, So Sorry So Slow, via Spare Thought. It features the single ‘Suffer One’ featuring Owen Pallett, a cautious excavation of self and sexuality, clambering across a gorgeously shapeshifting, filmic five-minutes.

Containing some of the band’s most abrasive but gentle, beautiful and melismatic work to date, So Sorry So Slow has many defining characteristics: romance, panic, devotion and remorse, threaded together by an intentionally laser-focused love. It’s deeply personal, bruised and candid in its expressions of tenderness, and deeply pained in its concurrent reflections of ecological regret. Across its hour-long runtime, a delicate, frenetic energy and glacial heaviness coexist, the band pitting those paces against one another. In their richly experimental timbre, dancing strings and fluttering falsettos prang against a bed of brass drones like a wounded bird.

“We started writing in 2017 and began recording in 2018,” says vocalist Harry Burgess. “We genuinely thought it might be finished in 2018! But things kept developing and, having resolutely not struck while the iron was hot, there was no real external push to rush things after that, so we just kept letting things shift and unfold until it felt right. Listening back to my voice notes it’s nice to notice that there are fragments of ideas from the whole period 2017-2023 which have shaped the record.”

Recorded in bursts at studios across London and in the band members’ flats, at Konk, on the Isle of Wight and in Sussex, So Sorry is unambiguous in its evolution. Sonically, there are sparks of the arrhythmic brightness that afforded the band’s critically acclaimed debut album Gist Is its cult adoration, for fans of Arthur Russell and Meredith Monk, but with a blossoming, melancholic darkness often overhead. Piano sprees and luscious string sections appear like low-hanging stars on a night-time drive, whilst plunging vocal distortions and humming brass loops resurrect heavy limbs in a bad dream.

“I usually have objects as kind of totems for ideas,” explains Burgess. “The album initially started out to do with performance… [the totem] was a head mic, one of the subtle skin-tone ones, discreet on the forehead of a West End star. A number of the first songs in their original forms were almost musical theatre piano ballads. I think that was really a device to write about my life as the ‘main character’ (pre internet-speak reframing): regrets about romance, relationships - unsustainable relationships with the self and others.”

“However, once we started writing, the ideas about unsustainable personal relationships, loving unevenly and heartbreak conflated with a more expressly ecological regret. Like contending with big feelings of loss, endings, beauty, desolation, and with how much joy the earth contains in it. Feeling so much gratitude bound up in waves of sadness. Maybe witnessing a slow-motion goodbye to all that, or its last gasps. I love the earth and the life it supports so much. I love how ecosystems fit together - even the brutal stuff. It may be basic to say, but now is the time to be laser focused on that love. I was thinking about human centrality on earth, us as the ‘main character’, the way that is served by faith and romanticism, and the subsequent disingenuous understandings of our position in the ecosystem, as only stewards somehow, rather than subjects. The totems at this point: a herald’s horn, lorry inner tubes, archaeological tools. I guess from doom, industry, history respectively.”

“Now I would say the record is about gripping. Totems being: crampons, rope, drips, desalination equipment, accruing various survival tech. I think gripping sums up both of the threads. There’s the emotionally correct clinging to the earth that is the substrate of everything we value, or the delusional clinging to our imagined dominant position. But also the practical, technological aspects of creating a sustainable relationship, of remaining here. Then I think of romance again.”

Tracklist:
01 - Bleat Melisma
02 - Suffer One
03 - y-rod
04 - No Relief
05 - Plenary
06 - Marquee
07 - Dusk Song
08 - Earth Of Worms
09 - No Sentry
10 - Bend
11 - I Was Surprised
12 - Windfarm

foobar2000 1.4.1 / Dynamic Range Meter 1.1.1
log date: 2024-05-12 13:48:31

––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––
Analyzed: Adult Jazz / So Sorry So Slow
––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––

DR Peak RMS Duration Track
––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––
DR8 -0.20 dB -10.82 dB 3:58 01-Bleat Melisma
DR7 -0.20 dB -10.57 dB 5:03 02-Suffer One
DR10 -0.20 dB -14.79 dB 4:26 03-y-rod
DR6 -0.20 dB -9.20 dB 3:59 04-No Relief
DR9 -0.20 dB -12.34 dB 4:18 05-Plenary
DR5 -0.20 dB -8.95 dB 6:18 06-Marquee
DR8 -0.20 dB -10.92 dB 5:44 07-Dusk Song
DR7 -0.20 dB -9.69 dB 5:55 08-Earth Of Worms
DR5 -0.20 dB -7.43 dB 5:17 09-No Sentry
DR7 -0.20 dB -9.80 dB 4:49 10-Bend
DR5 -0.20 dB -9.04 dB 7:34 11-I Was Surprised
DR8 -0.20 dB -11.50 dB 4:43 12-Windfarm
––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––

Number of tracks: 12
Official DR value: DR7

Samplerate: 44100 Hz
Channels: 2
Bits per sample: 24
Bitrate: 1416 kbps
Codec: FLAC
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Thanks to the Original customer!