T. Cole Rachel

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Review: Bob Mould's "Patch the Sky"

April 05, 2016 by T. Cole Rachel in Reviews, PItchfork

Bob Mould is at his best when he’s articulating anger at a high volume. His newest solo album, Patch the Sky, succeeds largely because these furious songs sound as if they're hardwired to raw nerves.
 

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April 05, 2016 /T. Cole Rachel
Bob Mould
Reviews, PItchfork

Review: Public Memory's "Wuthering Drum"

March 28, 2016 by T. Cole Rachel in Reviews, PItchfork

Public Memory is the solo nom de plume of Robert Toher, a Brooklyn-based musician who formerly served time as a member of Eraas and Apse. While those projects blurred the edges of rambling space rock and synthy post-punk, Public Memory dives headlong down the electronic darkwave rabbit hole, exploring a Korg-constructed sonic palette that weaves together a variety of primitive beats, delicately employed samples (bells, chimes, the weeping of ghosts), and woozy electronics that sound as if they might have been recorded at the bottom of a lake. Created over the course of a year while Toher was temporarily decamped in Los Angeles, Wuthering Drum is a work of restrained gloom—a remarkably textured electronic record whose minimalist tendencies keep it from collapsing under the weight of its own moribund aesthetic.

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March 28, 2016 /T. Cole Rachel
Music, Public Memory
Reviews, PItchfork
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Pitchfork's 100 Best Tracks of 2015

December 16, 2015 by T. Cole Rachel in Reviews, Lists, PItchfork, Music

I wrote about Sufjan Steven's "Fourth of July" and Björk's "Lionsong" for Pitchfork's 100 Best Tracks of 2015.

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December 16, 2015 /T. Cole Rachel
Sufjan Stevens, Bjork
Reviews, Lists, PItchfork, Music
Photo: Kevin Winter / Getty Images

Photo: Kevin Winter / Getty Images

Age Ain't Nothing But a Bummer For Adele on '25'

November 23, 2015 by T. Cole Rachel in Reviews, Spin, Music

In her first proper interview in over four years, the now 27-year-old Adele Adkins recently told a journalist from i-D, “Life is so much easier when you don’t hoard your past.” It’s a fairly potent statement coming from someone who has essentially built her stadium-sized career out of doing that very thing. Over the course of three albums Adele, the gazillion-selling British phenomenon, has proven herself to be the queen of romantic rumination — dissecting, articulating, and gloriously amplifying her own heartbreak in ways that, quite literally, make the whole world weep. At the time of the interview, the suggestion that her new album, the just-released 25, might shake off some of her melancholy and melodrama was an intriguing one. No longer heartbroken and now happily familied, what might a forward-looking and seemingly content Adele sing about?

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November 23, 2015 /T. Cole Rachel
Adele
Reviews, Spin, Music
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