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Broken Rope

Broken Rope in Bloomington, MN

Current price: $14.99
Get it at Barnes and Noble
Broken Rope

Broken Rope in Bloomington, MN

Current price: $14.99
Loading Inventory...

Size: CD

Get it at Barnes and Noble
For his second full-length solo album,
Merchandise
's
David Vassalotti
goes truly solo, writing, performing, recording, and producing
Broken Rope
unassisted. Though the album doesn't necessarily sound like the product of one pair of hands, its lo-fi angst and literary tendencies do channel a singular voice, one that, as in the past, diverges somewhat from his band's toward something noisier, sometimes sweeter, usually more intimate, and often more incomprehensible. More than two at least quasi-instrumentals occupy the ten-track set, starting with the opener, "The Trouble with Being Born," which sautes buzzing electronics and saxophone with guitar and keys in quirky ambience before cloudy dissonance abruptly gives way to the
Morrissey
-esque "Lady Day." Another of the album's catchier tracks, "Ines de Castro" sings of a tragic historical figure connected to the 14th century Portuguese royal family.
Vassalotti
, an English and American lit major, also (per press releases) incorporates Spanish poetry and Russian folklore into the song selection, though the lyrics are more often than not difficult to decipher. "Sarah Sings" is one such vocally obscured track. It features on-location, natural sound, including the vocalizations of a dog, while the next entry -- actually titled "The Dogs" -- instead offers pounding, whirring industrial distortion. Unpredictable and often sonically unsettling,
may try the patience of some with its ambitious, challenging mix of sound experiment and lucid song, but to others the same will prove fascinating in its expressiveness. ~ Marcy Donelson
For his second full-length solo album,
Merchandise
's
David Vassalotti
goes truly solo, writing, performing, recording, and producing
Broken Rope
unassisted. Though the album doesn't necessarily sound like the product of one pair of hands, its lo-fi angst and literary tendencies do channel a singular voice, one that, as in the past, diverges somewhat from his band's toward something noisier, sometimes sweeter, usually more intimate, and often more incomprehensible. More than two at least quasi-instrumentals occupy the ten-track set, starting with the opener, "The Trouble with Being Born," which sautes buzzing electronics and saxophone with guitar and keys in quirky ambience before cloudy dissonance abruptly gives way to the
Morrissey
-esque "Lady Day." Another of the album's catchier tracks, "Ines de Castro" sings of a tragic historical figure connected to the 14th century Portuguese royal family.
Vassalotti
, an English and American lit major, also (per press releases) incorporates Spanish poetry and Russian folklore into the song selection, though the lyrics are more often than not difficult to decipher. "Sarah Sings" is one such vocally obscured track. It features on-location, natural sound, including the vocalizations of a dog, while the next entry -- actually titled "The Dogs" -- instead offers pounding, whirring industrial distortion. Unpredictable and often sonically unsettling,
may try the patience of some with its ambitious, challenging mix of sound experiment and lucid song, but to others the same will prove fascinating in its expressiveness. ~ Marcy Donelson

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