YOUNG JESUS – Welcome to Conceptual Beach – LP – Vinyl
$21.99 Original price was: $21.99.$17.59Current price is: $17.59.
TRACKLISTING:
- Faith 7:04
- Pattern Doubt 3:32
- (un)Knowing 4:09
- Meditations 6:43
- Root and Crown 2:53
- Lark 11:44
- Magicians 10:09
YOUNG JESUS Welcome to Conceptual Beach LP Vinyl
Includes Digital download
Imagine a shoreline alone, carved from the continent, without land or water to border it, a rind of possibility, a moon-colored border between land and sea, knowing and unknowing. This is Conceptual Beach, a place John Rossiter, vocalist / guitarist of Los Angeles-based Young Jesus, describes as his long-time mental refuge, where he imagines himself livinglike a medieval, stigmata-wrought hermitall his needs for okay-ness finally met. Their new album, Welcome to Conceptual Beach, first took form as a physical zine in 2016, when the four members of the band were on their first tour together. At that time, it was still somewhere Rossiter inhabited alone, protective of his solitude. Now, he is allowing others to join him there. The reason its called Welcome to [Conceptual Beach] is because Im inviting other inner landscapes into it, Rossiter explains as he describes the transformation of the beachs terrain into a whole varied emotional world.
Indeed, Welcome to Conceptual Beach elucidates the balance between many contrasting forces: the individual and the collective, the rational and the emotive, the tame and wild. It transforms the complex musicality of much post- and math-rock into a radical, crystalline practice, vibrant and light-casting. The bands members including Marcel Borbon (bass), Eric Shevrin (keys), and Kern Haug (drums) in addition to Rossiter himself refract and reconnect throughout the record, experimenting with new kinds of sounds and composition. They artfully balance the wandering riffs of previous records with irresistible hooks, woven into their characteristic swathes of improvisation to create a shimmering, molten tapestry.
Faith, the opening track, runs parallel to the album as a whole: dynamic and groovy and psychedelic and emotional. Each musician has a moment to shine and to speak. Opening with Kerns version of the Purdie Shuffle, to Marcels polyrhythmic bass, to Erics organ solo, and held together by Johns whispered prayer that, we just might grow, Young Jesus offer a music uniquely in service to emotion. (un)Knowing is a meditation celebration, a song about the confusion and pain of re-examining a lifeof committing to a life of experience and curiosity. Mixing the spirit and experimentation of OK Computer with the sincerity of Bon Iver, Root and Crown is the first song that offers a way out of the traps and patterns of a life. A commitment to grieving, listening, and growing. A devotion to spring, sung from the depths of winter.
Whether its a bank-vault-turned-concert-hall in San Francisco, a Brooklyn artists collective, a house show in central Connecticut, or a recording studio, a Young Jesus performance is unique and unrepeatable. Recordings are only snapshots of their songs in a given moment. Over dozens of shows, a single song will metamorphosize each time its played, taking on infinite new geometries. When they play live, their jamminga self-selected, unaffected and doggedly genuine term for their complex improvisationsis a visceral, communal experience. They render sound an instinct, filling the space with urgency and joy. The intensity of feeling and connection between the band members and to their music is a thick, palpable force that sweeps audiences up, propelling them into uncharted territories.
On Welcome to Conceptual Beach, Young Jesus pries our sobs from parentheticals and wields them with a brutal but tender force. They take these elements and translate them into a spacious ground for growth, for ourselves, our communities, our world. They affirm that change starts with how we reckon with ourselves as individuals, that we are all magicians, as the closing track of Welcome to Conceptual Beach suggests, making love and doing dishes, capable of conjuring new worlds for ourselves, and to live in others.
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