Louis Cole - Time - 2x LP Vinyl

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SKU:c0015940 ,UPC:

Info

SKU:
c0015940
UPC:
5054429133677

Specifications

Batch, Album, Artist, Format,

Specifications

Album:
Time
Artist:
Louis Cole
Format:
12" Vinyl
UPC:
5054429133677

Description

Louis Cole makes his debut on Brainfeeder with release of new album Time. Available on 2LP black vinyl housed in a 5mm spined sleeve. The mark of a great chord progression is a peculiar mixture of surprise and inevitability. On first listen, you find yourself confused by the way that one chord follows another, refusing to follow the well-trodden path: jumping when they should step and bounding when they should glide. Eventually, once the song has burned itself into your brain—once its course has remapped your own neural pathways—you’ll have trouble imagining a world where these curious patterns didn’t exist. But even then, even after no matter how many plays, that harmonic dodge-and-feint will still produce the tiniest frisson of wrongness. It’s among the sweetest dopamine hits that music is capable of producing.

Louis Cole’s instrument of choice is the drums, but he definitely knows his way around a killer set of changes. Time, his third album, is brimming with strange, counterintuitive progressions—chords that seem to slip sideways, tumbling into one another, jostling and pivoting just when you don’t expect. An unusual mixture of hard funk and soft pop, like Zapp and Burt Bacharach stuck in an elevator together, Cole's is a sly, jubilant sound; it makes good use of the way funk also thrives upon a sense of wrongness, a screw-faced delight at things gone awry.

Flying Lotus’ Brainfeeder label turns out to be a good home for Cole’s music. A falsetto singer and secret sentimentalist, he doesn’t often sound much like his labelmates, even if he has played with Thundercat, who returns the favor here on “Tunnels in the Air”; Dennis Hamm, Thundercat’s live keyboardist, also turns up, laying down a ripping piano solo on “Trying Not to Die.” But Cole’s gently twisted perspective fits FlyLo’s mischievous M.O. He’s got a squirrelly sense of humor and a barely veiled obsession with death. This is a guy who, seven years ago, in his early days of uploading DIY videos to YouTube, paired a lovely, sentimental instrumental called “Clouds” with stock footage of nuclear bombs going off. At times, he’s come dangerously close to looking like a novelty artist: His biggest viral hit to date is a lo-fi video—both the graphics and his getup could easily be mistaken for a cable-access leftover from the mid-1980s—called “Bank Account” in which he films himself in split screen, playing keys and drums, and singing, in his frictionless coo, “I don’t want to check my bank account.”
A1Weird Part Of The Night
A2When You're Ugly (feat. Genevieve Artadi)
A3Everytime
B1Phone
B2Real Life (feat. Brad Mehldau)
B3More Love Less Hate
B4Tunnels In The Air (feat. Thundercat)
C1Last Time You Went Away
C2Freaky Times
C3After The Load Is Blown
C4A Little Bit More Time
D1Trying Not To Die (feat. Dennis Hamm)
D2Things
D3Night