This Is Lorelei - Box for Buddy, Box for Star - New LP Record 2024 Double Double Whammy Red Vinyl - Indie Rock

This Is Lorelei - Box for Buddy, Box for Star - New LP Record 2024 Double Double Whammy Red Vinyl - Indie Rock

Regular price €26.99 €0.00

Quantity - 3

This Is Lorelei - Box for Buddy, Box for Star

Label: Double Double Whammy – DDW101
Format:
Vinyl, LP, Album, Red Vinyl
Country: US
Released:
Genre: Rock
Style: Indie Rock

Tracklist

A1 Angel's Eye
A2 Perfect Hand
A3 I'm All Fucked Up
A4 Dancing In The Club
A5 My Boy Limbo
B1 Where's Your Love Now
B2 Box For Buddy, Box For Star
B3 A Song That Sings About You
B4 Two Legs
B5 An Extra Beat For You And Me




Barcode and Other Identifiers

  • Barcode: 644110410115

Since 2012, New York City singer-songwriter Nate Amos (Water From Your Eyes, My Idea) has recorded and self-released hundreds of songs under the This Is Lorelei moniker, and perhaps surprisingly, after a decade plus, "Box for Buddy, Box for Star" marks the first attempt at a traditional, intentionally written full-length album. Amos describes the bulk of This Is Lorelei’s discography as “unedited diary entries,” written and recorded without much forethought, regard for genre or reverence for albums as thematic bodies of work, so oddly enough, "Box for Buddy, Box for Star" is both a fresh start and the culmination of years of diligent, interesting songwriting.

"Box for Buddy, Box for Star" embraces traditional pop songcraft and a confessional, carefully written brand of lyricism, dabbling in the kind of classic singer-songwriter cliches he never imagined toying with—but not without the counterbalancing force of shitpost-y irony, which listeners have come to expect from Amos. Inspired by the gritty romanticism of Shane MacGowan and the Jim Croce
mimicry of Tim Heidecker’s "What the Brokenhearted Do…", the LP exudes both a grizzled charm and youthful intensity. Sonically, Amos adorns the record with quaint country gestures—a full-circle artistic choice for Amos whose father is a veteran bluegrass musician.

And it wouldn’t be a Nate Amos release without a few curveballs, like “Dancing in the Club,” a bouncy auto-tuned pop song, which he likens to Bruce Hornsby-via-Blink-182, or “Perfect Hand,” an intimate piano-led track with vocal samples, alarm bell-like effects and skittering electronic beats. He also mischievously opens the album with a red herring of sorts, “Angel’s Eye,” a twangy sci-fi country duet about an angel who abducts a cowboy and unintentionally falls in love.