It’s time to give the new Geese record a gander.
Geese (not to
be confused with Goose, Ducks Ltd, The Wrens, Eagles or any of those other bird-themed
bands) are a four-piece rock group that I only discovered a month ago, but
apparently they’ve got three previous albums under their belt and have been
making music since 2016. Wikipedia says that their lead singer and founding
member Cameron Winter is ‘22-23’ years old (why the rough estimate?), which according
to my calculations means Cameron Winter was impressively only 13-14 years old
when the band got started.
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I originally thought
these guys were a British ‘windmill scene’ band as they have an unhinged energy
that seems similar to bands like BCNR, Black Midi, Shame and Squid. But no,
these guys are from Brooklyn (which, judging from recent Brooklyn bands I’ve
heard, seems to have an equally weird and exciting music scene right now). Their
vocals are an acquired taste. They sound like Alt-J’s Joe Newman attempting a southern
bluesy drawl. Personally I’m on the fence as to whether I wholly like the
vocals or not: there’s an endearing humour to Cameron’s slow and elongated delivery
when unveiling seemingly random lines like ‘a hundred hoooorses daaaaaaancing
maaaaybe one-hundred-and-twenty foooour’, but I think his voice is perhaps a
little goofy for pulling off sincere songs like ‘au pays du cocaine’. I also
wish there was a bit more bonkers screeching as found in opening track ‘Trinidad’
(‘THERE’S A BOMB IN MY CAR!!!’), but I may be in the minority there.
Ultimately,
the best part about Getting Killed (there’s probably a better way to
word this sentence) is the instrumentation. Geese craft songs in a very unusual
way that feels unpredictable and semi-improvised, while somehow feeling oddly
complete. Riffs come in and out as they please as on ‘100 Horses’ and songs often
don’t reach a natural conclusion (‘Half-Real’ even cuts out abruptly). What the
band are very good at is building up songs and keeping them ever-changing. Highlights
include title track ‘Getting Killed’ with its bustling percussion and beautiful
instrumental break half-way through, and ‘Islands of Men’ which slowly builds
around a stomping rhythm. However, the most impressive track comes at the very
end, ‘Long Island City Here I Come’ – a song that continuously speeds up and
gains intensity until it reaches a blitzkrieg crescendo that leaves you out of
breath just listening to it.
★★★★☆
TRACK TASTER:

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