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Album round-up
Our pick of the week's music releases

Wye Oak
Shriek
(City Slang)
3/5
With both its band members born in the 1980s, it is perhaps apt that Wye Oak’s new record has a strong sense of that decade’s mood.
Hailing from Maryland, multi-instrumentalist Andy Stack and vocalist Jenn Wasner have ditched the guitar focus of their previous work, choosing instead to put keyboards and synthesisers front and centre.
Despicable Animal steals the keyboard intro riff from Tears for Fears’ Everybody Wants To Rule The World to great effect while Glory is built around a huge wall of sound, Wasner’s sultry vocals bringing to mind Alison Goldfrapp.
Stripped down and stark, the vulnerable, almost spoken word ballad I Know The Law is arguably the most affecting track here.
Atmospheric and varied, Shriek is a hipster’s delight. However, there is a niggling feeling of an album lacking the kind of distinctive voice and attitude that causes people to fall in love with the best bands.
Ian Sinclair


Low Tide Drifters
Music For The Rest Of Us
(Atomic Records)
4/5
This, the second album of US folk from Low Tide Drifters, comprises 10 tracks ranging from the hard-hitting Living On Too Little to the Depression-era love songs My Vivian and Bound For Lakeview.
There’s a memorable cover too of the Scottish folk legend Alistair Hulett’s Destitution Road.
The combination of banjo, mandolin and harmonica paint a picture of life in the middle of hard times.
And, in the era of Ukip hysteria about immigration, there is an interesting US take on those whom the rich are happy to employ at cheap rates but still denigrate and demean them on the classic We Just Come To Work Here (We Don’t Come To Die).
There’s a stirring call for environmental action too on Will We Say We Did Our Best?
But however worthy its sentiments, it might cause slight embarrassment to all those smokestack socialists out there.
Mike Cattell


 

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