So Click Heels: A Downwards Compilation
Downwards' collect the best of their DO series, together with a handful of exclusive aces on 'So Click Heels'. Since 2009 the label's affections for the miasmatic drizzle, sonic innovation and repressed violence of post-punk and shoegaze has manifested itself in some twelve releases veering between the scuzzy basement noise of Collin Gorman Weiland, the blissful feedback blooms of The KVB, and swaggering rock'n'roll from DVA Damas. A good proportion of them feature here - including Richard H Kirk's droning remix of Tropic Of Cancer's 'Be Brave', the desiccated drum machines of Sandra Electronics (Regis), and Pink Playground's powdered-glass shoegaze bloomer 'Ten' - but of most interest to the nerds (you, us) are the unheard, unreleased bits: the phet-clenched twitch of Deathday's 'Dropped Into Obscurity' or V West's 'Catching Me Cold'; the excoriating sludge of The KVB's 'Dayzed'; a mighty slab of monochrome, motorik punk from Silent Servants (Juan Mendez); the psychoactivated rock 'n roll of Green Screen Door; and not least an insidious Electro cut from Antonym, or the graphite surfaces and choking dust of Six Six Seconds' 'Tearing Down Heaven'. Recommended!
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Downwards' collect the best of their DO series, together with a handful of exclusive aces on 'So Click Heels'. Since 2009 the label's affections for the miasmatic drizzle, sonic innovation and repressed violence of post-punk and shoegaze has manifested itself in some twelve releases veering between the scuzzy basement noise of Collin Gorman Weiland, the blissful feedback blooms of The KVB, and swaggering rock'n'roll from DVA Damas. A good proportion of them feature here - including Richard H Kirk's droning remix of Tropic Of Cancer's 'Be Brave', the desiccated drum machines of Sandra Electronics (Regis), and Pink Playground's powdered-glass shoegaze bloomer 'Ten' - but of most interest to the nerds (you, us) are the unheard, unreleased bits: the phet-clenched twitch of Deathday's 'Dropped Into Obscurity' or V West's 'Catching Me Cold'; the excoriating sludge of The KVB's 'Dayzed'; a mighty slab of monochrome, motorik punk from Silent Servants (Juan Mendez); the psychoactivated rock 'n roll of Green Screen Door; and not least an insidious Electro cut from Antonym, or the graphite surfaces and choking dust of Six Six Seconds' 'Tearing Down Heaven'. Recommended!
Downwards' collect the best of their DO series, together with a handful of exclusive aces on 'So Click Heels'. Since 2009 the label's affections for the miasmatic drizzle, sonic innovation and repressed violence of post-punk and shoegaze has manifested itself in some twelve releases veering between the scuzzy basement noise of Collin Gorman Weiland, the blissful feedback blooms of The KVB, and swaggering rock'n'roll from DVA Damas. A good proportion of them feature here - including Richard H Kirk's droning remix of Tropic Of Cancer's 'Be Brave', the desiccated drum machines of Sandra Electronics (Regis), and Pink Playground's powdered-glass shoegaze bloomer 'Ten' - but of most interest to the nerds (you, us) are the unheard, unreleased bits: the phet-clenched twitch of Deathday's 'Dropped Into Obscurity' or V West's 'Catching Me Cold'; the excoriating sludge of The KVB's 'Dayzed'; a mighty slab of monochrome, motorik punk from Silent Servants (Juan Mendez); the psychoactivated rock 'n roll of Green Screen Door; and not least an insidious Electro cut from Antonym, or the graphite surfaces and choking dust of Six Six Seconds' 'Tearing Down Heaven'. Recommended!