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Sunjacket
Schubas
3159 N Southport Ave
Chicago, IL 60657
27 de ago. de 2023
19:00 GMT-5
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Sunjacket Biography
"An excellent, experimental debut—an expansive exploration of human compulsions."
– Stereogum on their debut Mantra
Chicago’s Sunjacket is not a measure-once, cut-once musical outfit. Bryan Kveton (vocals, synths, guitars), Carl Hauck (vocals, synths, guitars), and Garret Bodette (drums, percussion) toil over four-minute pop songs with workman-like inefficiency, at times wielding scalpels and other times axing away with almost gory abandon. The process: painstakingly thoughtful. The result: an owner’s manual printed in three different languages, only to be set ablaze and rewritten from scratch by its translators.
On More Lifelike, the follow-up to 2016’s Mantra, Sunjacket’s synth-driven art rock vibrates with an internal tension, managing to feel both grand and intimate, exacting and ethereal, optimistic and brooding. Dark, yet ornamented with shards of melodic lightness, the record’s spatial sound design and acoustic-electronic hybrid beats envelop the songwriting like sun-pricked fog.
Infused with palpable yearning, lush arrangements threaten to crack at their static-filled edges. Skittering rhythms leap and convulse below silken electronic washes. Voices hover at the breaking point between full and falsetto, imbued with a blend of introspection and world-weariness. It’s the soundtrack to that elusive moment just before limbo finally gives way to movement.
More Lifelike is brought to you by vacated wallpaper, cross-examined self-doubt, reckless euphoria, and a purgatorial chase for more. The album—shrink-wrapped both to alleviate and heighten your anxiety—was engineered and produced in collaboration with Fraser McCulloch, mixed by Brett Bullion, and mastered by Huntley Miller. You’ll find its authors in the low-traffic aisles of your local hardware megastore, patiently awaiting intervention, divine or orange-aproned.
Ler mais– Stereogum on their debut Mantra
Chicago’s Sunjacket is not a measure-once, cut-once musical outfit. Bryan Kveton (vocals, synths, guitars), Carl Hauck (vocals, synths, guitars), and Garret Bodette (drums, percussion) toil over four-minute pop songs with workman-like inefficiency, at times wielding scalpels and other times axing away with almost gory abandon. The process: painstakingly thoughtful. The result: an owner’s manual printed in three different languages, only to be set ablaze and rewritten from scratch by its translators.
On More Lifelike, the follow-up to 2016’s Mantra, Sunjacket’s synth-driven art rock vibrates with an internal tension, managing to feel both grand and intimate, exacting and ethereal, optimistic and brooding. Dark, yet ornamented with shards of melodic lightness, the record’s spatial sound design and acoustic-electronic hybrid beats envelop the songwriting like sun-pricked fog.
Infused with palpable yearning, lush arrangements threaten to crack at their static-filled edges. Skittering rhythms leap and convulse below silken electronic washes. Voices hover at the breaking point between full and falsetto, imbued with a blend of introspection and world-weariness. It’s the soundtrack to that elusive moment just before limbo finally gives way to movement.
More Lifelike is brought to you by vacated wallpaper, cross-examined self-doubt, reckless euphoria, and a purgatorial chase for more. The album—shrink-wrapped both to alleviate and heighten your anxiety—was engineered and produced in collaboration with Fraser McCulloch, mixed by Brett Bullion, and mastered by Huntley Miller. You’ll find its authors in the low-traffic aisles of your local hardware megastore, patiently awaiting intervention, divine or orange-aproned.
Indie
Synth Rock
Electronic
Indie Rock
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