Coffin Prick - Side Splits [Sophomore Lounge]

Coffin Prick - Side Splits [Sophomore Lounge]

Shipping calculated at checkout.

All-star remix of COFFIN PRICK's 2023 blown-out psychodelic headscratcher LP 'LAUGHING'... feating treatments from members of BOREDOMS, TORTOISE, PHEW, MELT BANANA, BATTLES and more!

SOPHOMORE LOUNGE - The collection of music you're about to squeeze through your temporal lobe is not comprised of your standard 4/4 dance remixes. Unlike traditional remix records, these thirteen pieces are fully reconstructed re-imaginings of tunes from Coffin Prick's debut LP “Laughing” (Sophomore Lounge, 2023). Built from the e-ground up as they were initially recorded during the album's master sessions, the tracks at hand are - at times - as untraceable to their original as they are difficult to genrefy, playing out as true reflections of each individual artist's creative process. Ready for some crooked wisdom? Here's the rundown...
-
Side 1 - Yoshimio's (00I00/Saicobab/Boredoms) rendering of "The Guild Of Cowards" is a monumental and hypnotizing mission to an unknown summit. Her masterful drumming and distinctive vocal stabs provide a suspenseful tension and release. Ian Williams/Battles' bewildering take on "Laughing" is an interpretation that leaves the listener off-balance, as though they themselves have been compacted into a cracked, malfunctioning disc drive. Ed Sunspot (alias of visual mastermind Robert Beatty) charts an audio monograph of "Rusty Lemonade" that sees the original cut's paranoid dub make way for an absurdist, psychotropic sort-of exotica. John Herndon (Tortoise/A Grape Dope) follows with his hazy, late-night rearrangement of "The Big Hunger." What was once a terse synth piece now finds itself cruising the hillsides of Los Angeles to distant, unknowable reaches. Legendary Tokyo mavericks Melt Banana have their own way with "Laughing," throwing it through their unique and unmistakable blender while pushing the BPM to its absolute limit. Never a band known for 'taking it easy,' their version is chaotic, tuneful, and memorable in a way that only they could pull-off. Gel Set concludes side A with a slick, club positive, pitch negative run through the source LP's original opener, "Surfs Up," resulting in the closest piece of music in this collection that one could clearly trace to "Dance Music."

Side 2 - Tim Kinsella (Joan of Arc/Kinsella & Pulse, Make Believe, etc.) kicks off side B with a taste of Chicago, plunging "Crooked Wisdom" into an equilibrium testing, industrial-strength bath for your ears. Nipping at Kinsella's heels is a vocoder-heavy "Swimming" from multi-instrumental master Dan Bitney (Tortoise/Mecht Mensch). Once a treatise on a certain fear of dying, the tune now finds itself robotripping in an attempt to laugh off its own warped sense of self. Phew! Shit and Shine's alternately monolithic rendering of "Laughing" features a crushed, oozing tone assault that has the potential to leave even the most hardened drone maniac weeping for blessed forgiveness (where cursed little is to be found!). Dream___Mega throws "The Guild of Cowards" for a mighty tumble, frying the original's groove and crystallizing it deep in the core of the listener's consciousness. It'll take geologists years to excavate. Beau Wanzer's exploration of "Legendary Sweet Tooth" exists in a dark space between modernist horror score and mutated disco. Sure to fulfill any warehouse raver's left-of-left field aesthetic desires. Side B is rounded out by Roadhouse (Ryan Davis), who re-tapes "Smooth Rubber Ailment" with a blast of zonked funk, distilling the track down to a stuttering, peculiar, cut and paste 4-track laugh-off.