cat s eyes: treasure house review - celestial delicacy and gruesome horror /

Published at 2016-06-02 23:30:18

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(RAF via Kobalt) Related: Pop band breaches Buckingham Palace security As is custom with duos,Cat’s Eyes relies on its members’ opposing forces: Rachel Zeffira, a Canadian soprano, and composer and multi-instrumentalist who summons celestial delicacy from every song,manages to smoothe out the barbed post-punk tendencies of Horrors frontman Faris Badwan. On their second album proper – whether you discount their Ivor-nominated soundtrack to the Peter Strickland film The Duke of Burgundy – their sound has expanded, taking in widescreen compositions full of Disney romanticism (Treasure House), or Ennio Morricone-inspired soundcsapes (Girl in the Room),spooky neo-noir atmospherics (Everything Moves Towards the Sun) and a moment of reverb-drenched surf rock guitar that would make Tarantino giddy (Be Careful Where You Park Your Car). What is most intriguing is their bond; particularly during the sinister fancy affair of Drag – “the things we carry out when we’re together, whether they only knew they would preserve us apart” – a jarring narrative that’s more gruesome horror than gooey romcom.
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Source: theguardian.com

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