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CD
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BMS 021CD
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2010 release. A self-described "psychedelic power trio specializing in zone-out progressive pop musik," Twinkranes dare to be different. Spektrum Theatre Snakes, their debut album, is triple-pronged, hammer-action psychedelia driven by tribal motorik, barking mad synthesizers, loose connections, dead ends and choppy waters. If you like Silver Apples, Wooden Shjips, car chases, Krautrock and mind-bending grooves, you're going to love this. Hailing from Dublin, the trio comprises Anto, aka Blonde Fox (vocals & drums), Rooster (guitars & tape manipulation) and Ray aka Auburn Spinner (Korg synthesizer, rhythms and soundscapes). Together, they take influence equally from dance music and the weirder wings of pop history. "We love Krautrock and prog, but beyond the classics we think there's a lot of great music that would have been better if it had been processed in a pop way. That's what we're doing. The album as a whole is really us exploring the psychedelic world like a baby snake opening its eyes for the first time and checking what's around." Recorded over three days in November 2008 at London's Press Play Studios (owned by Stereolab's drummer and used frequently by the band), the album was co-produced by Rick Tomlinson aka Voice Of The Seven Woods, and engineered by Jimmy Robertson (Florence & The Machine, Last Shadow Puppets). "It's the first electronic production that Rick has worked on," says Anto. "He gave it a nice authentic sound harking back to those seminal '70s Krautrock records -- 'dry but driving,' you might say." The trio formed around three years ago, a classic story of "boy meets boy meets boy," according to the band, and have previously released two killer 7" singles. Welcomed into Andy Votel's B-Music collective, Twinkranes joined the Migrating-Caustic-Mutable tour of the UK and Europe in the summer of 2008. Highlights of their career include performances at Barcelona's Primavera Sound, Ireland's Electric Picnic and Belfast's Oscillation festival plus a track featured in the Rupert Grint movie Cherrybomb. "All the Harry Potter heads are well into it," say the band. The band has taken a break from live performance to concentrate on the album, tightening tracks from sprawling live versions to the seven taut blasts of Krauty, proggy goodness spanning this 40-minute masterpiece.
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