Band,
Rock
Comparing Brontosaurus to anything past or present is about as tough as transcribing some of their own constantly shifting suites. Here, the rhythm gambling, tom heavy rumblings of indie rock elite such as Don Caballero or Dianogah rub elbows with the slightly madscientist guitar pop leanings of the New Pornographers, as well as intricate folk storytelling. No one particular mood stays past its welcome on Our Animal Ways,but lyrically Kelley and Papaleo are clearly searching to get back to basics – by at least hundreds of years – or perhaps alerting listeners of a strangely beautiful, yet apocalyptic restart. Lines about “waiting for a carcass I can commandeer,” or hopes to “start rotting soon / as being mortal can spoil the man” come across more preparatory and poetic, rather than threatening, giving the rich musical accompaniment a solid venue to stand on, only adding to its mystery. Vice versa, when Kelley and Papaleo swap instruments – often several times – during the same song, it only assists the progress of the story at hand. Such a yin yang relationship artistically is rare, it's constantly taking us down new avenues.
Nicholas Kelley dr | |
Nicholas Papaleo key |
Track list and 30sec audio provided by
Title | Artist | Year | Type |
---|---|---|---|
Our Animal Ways | Brontosaurus | 2015 | Album |
Cold Comes To Claim | Brontosaurus | 2011 | Album |
Cold Comes To Claim | Brontosaurus | 2011 | Album |