Product Description The album draws from a much broader palette than the band's debut; utilizing repetitive loops and samples, playing up a rhythm section that could walk into any recording session by The Fall and feel comfortable, honing an expansive loose guitar sound and all the while retaining that unmistakable knack with melody. It's a really exciting and refreshingly original record. Of the album, the band's Jack Cooper says, 'We set about trying to make a record that was far more original and broader than the first one... a representation of all the things that inspired us rather than a small portion. We began writing with us in mind...playing to our strengths. 'Bodies' was the first song...like most of the album written to repetitive loops and drones. The demo had an Arthur Russell drum loop because it sounded how Neil drums so I guess that's where we were at. Without saying 'there's always been a dance element to our music', I think we wanted to write songs that people might be able to move to, if the mood was to take them and there's something incredibly satisfying in repetition.' Review While still a fair distance from the shores of the oxymoronic ‘indie mainstream’, and by no means crafting uniform, easily accessible rock nuggets, the Mazes of 2013 have certainly tidied themselves up, compared to their earliest ventures three or so years ago. Debuting in 2009 with a 7” single on Sex Is Disgusting Records – an almost self-parodying name for a bedroom indie label – a flurry of similar releases followed, generally suggesting a love for winsome melody but obstinate in their lo-fi production values and general lack of preciousness. Signing to the larger indie FatCat for 2011 debut album A Thousand Heys served them well. It seemed to encourage them to focus their passions and abilities – for semi-garagey jangle-pop, hazy post-punk and blissful periods of repetition – with a long player in mind. Ores & Minerals, its follow-up, is arguably less direct, but more fully realised, and likely more enduring. The decision to produce it themselves may have been as much about finances as control, but they’ve captured their key elements in full colour. The exacting chime of Jack Cooper’s guitar drives songs like seven-minute opener Bodies, Skulking and the title track – three examples of their Krautrock influence, echoing Neu! or La Dusseldorf but feeding them through an indie-scuzz filter. Like most of the bands suggested as Mazes’ influences in the past – Guided by Voices, Pavement, New Zealand indie cultists The Clean – the trio’s love of legit oldies-bin rock seems genuine. Dan Higgs Particle’s title is a dubious pun hailing the former frontman of US rock eccentrics Lungfish, and bears a loose resemblance thanks to its gnarly, scrawly guitars. Although these terms are relative, the midsection of Ores & Minerals is probably most suggestive of indie orthodoxy. Afforded a re-recording, Sucker Punched and Delancey Essex could have held their own in a mid-90s indie arena that made successes of, say, Teenage Fanclub. A couple of concessions to boombox-recorded obscurantism (gloopy instrumental Significant Bullet; detuned piano’n’field recording non-extravaganza Leominster) serve to confirm that Mazes aren’t eyeing a commercial breakthrough too hungrily yet. There remains plenty to love about this second album, though. --Noel Gardner This link will take you off a new window Review 'You know The Vaccines, you know The Strokes, this is the next lot' --Zane Lowe BBC Radio 1
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I've made a journey back to the vinyl records by buying a turntable and amplifier and decided to purchase the division bell on vinyl by pink Floyd as it's one of the best albums I've ever heard..
I was able to purchase a sealed copy of this long deleted rare edition of album Avonmore via Yachew who shipped it promptly. Their price was the best online.