Beaches & Canyons
Beaches & Canyons is the first full-length album by experimental noise band Black Dice, released in 2002 on DFA and FatCat. It was named the 9th best album of 2000–2009 by Tiny Mix Tapes.[7] BackgroundThis album presents a transition in sound for Black Dice, specifically from their earlier roots in hardcore to a more experimental, meditative sound.[8] When asked about their change in direction, band member Eric Copeland said: "Our shows used to be 'all songs.' Then it would be songs with these long transitions between things, instead of just flat or silent. When Aaron came along, we got better at that stuff, and that became more what we wanted to play. Playing the songs became secondary".[9] The band recorded the album in four or five days without any label deal, borrowing money from the Copelands' father to fund the sessions.[10] They subsequently struggled to interest a label in releasing it: "we made this record, and we really liked it, but people we sent it to, we wouldn't hear back from anyone," which Eric described as "not exactly humiliating, but it puts you in your place."[10] New York label DFA finally expressed interest in releasing the album on CD and vinyl.[10] It is not to be confused with the 1997 compilation of the same name by the Los Angeles-based indie-rock trio, The Summer Hits.[11] ReceptionUncut stated that the group had as "organized their art-skronk into pulsating pieces in an avant-shamanic tradition that includes late Boredoms, early Popol Vuh and Coil. The dominant tone is violent ambience so that, remarkably, the noise eruptions seem no more malign than the superficially quiet passages that precede them. It all adds up to a genuinely psychedelic record."[5] Pitchfork called the album "an intense document of Black Dice's evolution—cycling through styles and equipment like they're simple and meaningless tools, eyes on the goal of reorganizing sound and transforming it through sheer volume."[2] Tiny Mix Tapes called it "an ethereal journey that will have your mind stimulated and body trembling," consisting of impressionistic "free-form compositions [...] ambiguous melodies and off-kilter polyrhythms."[4] The Village Voice described the group as "original" but dismissed the album as a "novelty record."[6] Track listing
Personnel
References
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