Sculptor (LP)

 
Sculptor (LP) cover
$65.00 Out of Stock
6+ weeks
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Luluc
Sculptor (LP)

[ Mistletone / LP ]

Release Date: Friday 13 July 2018

This item is currently out of stock. It may take 6 or more weeks to obtain from when you place your order as this is a specialist product.

Sculptor can be consumed loud; because while Luluc's music is at times masterful in it's minimalism, it is anything but quiet in impact. There's a before you hear Luluc's music, and an after - a turning point that affects people with rare force. Janet Weiss of Sleater-Kinney says "it's music that once you hear it, you can't live without it". The National's Matt Berninger said that for months, Passerby was "the only album I wanted to listen to". "What first hits is that voice," writes Peter Blackstock (No Depression),"a peaceful serenity that reaches deep into the heart." When NPR's Bob Boilen named 2014's Passerby his album of the year, he wrote: "I've listened to this record by Australia's Luluc more than any other this year. These songs feel like they've always been." Legendary producer Joe Boyd, who discovered Nick Drake, told BBC radio he exclaimed "Who the hell is this?!" when he first heard Luluc's debut, Dear Hamlyn.

That gripping, imperative quality pulses through Sculptor, perhaps to an even greater extent than on Passerby or Dear Hamlyn (2008). Songwriter and vocalist Zoe Randell writes with more experimentation and possibility. From the contemplative scene of "Cambridge", to the churning disaster chronicled in the title track, the songs on Sculptor are there for the taking. "Broadly speaking, with these new songs I was interested in the difficulties that life can throw at us - what we can do with them, how they can shape us, and what say we have," Randell explains. "That potential that is there for everyone, the different lives that are open to us. That's what I love in Ise's poem 'Spring Days and Blossom' - which form the lyrics to "Spring" - the brimming sense of spring and its cycle, the enormity of what's possible and the beauty."

Sonically, the band have broadened their tonal palette following on from the successful collaboration on Passerby, co-produced with The National's Aaron Dessner. Multi-instrumentalist, singer and producer Steve Hassett mastered a wider spectrum of instruments to fully realise the album's expansive and daring vision. Randell and Hassett do nearly all of the writing, recording, and producing themselves, but their vision is far from insular.

In addition to Dinosaur Jr. founder J Mascis, Sculptor features contributions from several friends including Dessner (shreds on "Kids" and programmed drums on "Heist") and Jim White of Dirty Three (drums on "Genius"), as well as musicians Matt Eccles on drums and Dave Nelson on horns. Recording took place in Luluc's new Brooklyn studio, which they built themselves. The new studio is volition and potential in action and even incorporates reclaimed cedar from Dessner's iconic former Ditmas Park studio, where The National and Luluc had both lived and recorded.

Tracks:

A1. Spring
A2. Heist
A3. Kids
A4. Controversy
A5. Cambridge
B1. Me and Jasper
B2. Genius
B3. Moon Girl
B4. Needn't Be
B5. Sculptor

Listen to Spring