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Scott Plant: Alone / With Us 12"
EP by Scott from Broken Prayer, Droid's Blood, etc.
Our take: Alone / With Us is the second solo EP from Scott Plant, following a lathe cut 10ā from a few years ago. Through projects like Civic Progress, Broken Prayer, Droids Blood, and Canal Irreal, Scott has made some of my favorite music of the modern punk era, and his turn toward pure electronic music has not dampened my enthusiasm one bit. Indeed, it seems like Scottās music evolves one step ahead of me, with him experimenting with new styles just as theyāre coming onto my radar. Indeed, Iāve been listening to more and more electronic music lately, and Alone / With Us fits in with artists Iāve enjoyed (like Mandy, Indiana and Rakta, for instance) while carrying forward the things I love most about Scottās previous music, namely his brilliant lyrics. The title of this EP is the name of the first two songs, and they seem like a matched pair here, the first song presenting a portrait of a loner who āhustlesā in the ādog eat dog world,ā while the second track shifts the perspective to a group (religious? professional? something even more sinister?) that targets those loners by offering them the sense of belonging they insist they donāt want but secretly crave. The music, like all of Scottās music, is just brilliant. There are no guitars here, just driving electronic drums and a symphony of synths playing off one another with the deftness of a well-seasoned band. Iām not articulate enough to explain what is so distinctive about Scottās music, but itās instantly identifiable here and Iām as in love with it as ever. If youāre a card-carrying member of the Scott Plant fan club like I am, you need this, but I canāt imagine any hardcore punk kid with a curiosity about electronic music wonāt love this.
Our take: Alone / With Us is the second solo EP from Scott Plant, following a lathe cut 10ā from a few years ago. Through projects like Civic Progress, Broken Prayer, Droids Blood, and Canal Irreal, Scott has made some of my favorite music of the modern punk era, and his turn toward pure electronic music has not dampened my enthusiasm one bit. Indeed, it seems like Scottās music evolves one step ahead of me, with him experimenting with new styles just as theyāre coming onto my radar. Indeed, Iāve been listening to more and more electronic music lately, and Alone / With Us fits in with artists Iāve enjoyed (like Mandy, Indiana and Rakta, for instance) while carrying forward the things I love most about Scottās previous music, namely his brilliant lyrics. The title of this EP is the name of the first two songs, and they seem like a matched pair here, the first song presenting a portrait of a loner who āhustlesā in the ādog eat dog world,ā while the second track shifts the perspective to a group (religious? professional? something even more sinister?) that targets those loners by offering them the sense of belonging they insist they donāt want but secretly crave. The music, like all of Scottās music, is just brilliant. There are no guitars here, just driving electronic drums and a symphony of synths playing off one another with the deftness of a well-seasoned band. Iām not articulate enough to explain what is so distinctive about Scottās music, but itās instantly identifiable here and Iām as in love with it as ever. If youāre a card-carrying member of the Scott Plant fan club like I am, you need this, but I canāt imagine any hardcore punk kid with a curiosity about electronic music wonāt love this.
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Scott Plant: Alone / With Us 12"
Scott Plant: Alone / With Us 12"
EP by Scott from Broken Prayer, Droid's Blood, etc.
Our take: Alone / With Us is the second solo EP from Scott Plant, following a lathe cut 10ā from a few years ago. Through projects like Civic Progress, Broken Prayer, Droids Blood, and Canal Irreal, Scott has made some of my favorite music of the modern punk era, and his turn toward pure electronic music has not dampened my enthusiasm one bit. Indeed, it seems like Scottās music evolves one step ahead of me, with him experimenting with new styles just as theyāre coming onto my radar. Indeed, Iāve been listening to more and more electronic music lately, and Alone / With Us fits in with artists Iāve enjoyed (like Mandy, Indiana and Rakta, for instance) while carrying forward the things I love most about Scottās previous music, namely his brilliant lyrics. The title of this EP is the name of the first two songs, and they seem like a matched pair here, the first song presenting a portrait of a loner who āhustlesā in the ādog eat dog world,ā while the second track shifts the perspective to a group (religious? professional? something even more sinister?) that targets those loners by offering them the sense of belonging they insist they donāt want but secretly crave. The music, like all of Scottās music, is just brilliant. There are no guitars here, just driving electronic drums and a symphony of synths playing off one another with the deftness of a well-seasoned band. Iām not articulate enough to explain what is so distinctive about Scottās music, but itās instantly identifiable here and Iām as in love with it as ever. If youāre a card-carrying member of the Scott Plant fan club like I am, you need this, but I canāt imagine any hardcore punk kid with a curiosity about electronic music wonāt love this.
Our take: Alone / With Us is the second solo EP from Scott Plant, following a lathe cut 10ā from a few years ago. Through projects like Civic Progress, Broken Prayer, Droids Blood, and Canal Irreal, Scott has made some of my favorite music of the modern punk era, and his turn toward pure electronic music has not dampened my enthusiasm one bit. Indeed, it seems like Scottās music evolves one step ahead of me, with him experimenting with new styles just as theyāre coming onto my radar. Indeed, Iāve been listening to more and more electronic music lately, and Alone / With Us fits in with artists Iāve enjoyed (like Mandy, Indiana and Rakta, for instance) while carrying forward the things I love most about Scottās previous music, namely his brilliant lyrics. The title of this EP is the name of the first two songs, and they seem like a matched pair here, the first song presenting a portrait of a loner who āhustlesā in the ādog eat dog world,ā while the second track shifts the perspective to a group (religious? professional? something even more sinister?) that targets those loners by offering them the sense of belonging they insist they donāt want but secretly crave. The music, like all of Scottās music, is just brilliant. There are no guitars here, just driving electronic drums and a symphony of synths playing off one another with the deftness of a well-seasoned band. Iām not articulate enough to explain what is so distinctive about Scottās music, but itās instantly identifiable here and Iām as in love with it as ever. If youāre a card-carrying member of the Scott Plant fan club like I am, you need this, but I canāt imagine any hardcore punk kid with a curiosity about electronic music wonāt love this.
$20.00
Scott Plant: Alone / With Us 12"ā
$20.00
Product Information
Product Information
Shipping & Returns
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Description
EP by Scott from Broken Prayer, Droid's Blood, etc.
Our take: Alone / With Us is the second solo EP from Scott Plant, following a lathe cut 10ā from a few years ago. Through projects like Civic Progress, Broken Prayer, Droids Blood, and Canal Irreal, Scott has made some of my favorite music of the modern punk era, and his turn toward pure electronic music has not dampened my enthusiasm one bit. Indeed, it seems like Scottās music evolves one step ahead of me, with him experimenting with new styles just as theyāre coming onto my radar. Indeed, Iāve been listening to more and more electronic music lately, and Alone / With Us fits in with artists Iāve enjoyed (like Mandy, Indiana and Rakta, for instance) while carrying forward the things I love most about Scottās previous music, namely his brilliant lyrics. The title of this EP is the name of the first two songs, and they seem like a matched pair here, the first song presenting a portrait of a loner who āhustlesā in the ādog eat dog world,ā while the second track shifts the perspective to a group (religious? professional? something even more sinister?) that targets those loners by offering them the sense of belonging they insist they donāt want but secretly crave. The music, like all of Scottās music, is just brilliant. There are no guitars here, just driving electronic drums and a symphony of synths playing off one another with the deftness of a well-seasoned band. Iām not articulate enough to explain what is so distinctive about Scottās music, but itās instantly identifiable here and Iām as in love with it as ever. If youāre a card-carrying member of the Scott Plant fan club like I am, you need this, but I canāt imagine any hardcore punk kid with a curiosity about electronic music wonāt love this.
Our take: Alone / With Us is the second solo EP from Scott Plant, following a lathe cut 10ā from a few years ago. Through projects like Civic Progress, Broken Prayer, Droids Blood, and Canal Irreal, Scott has made some of my favorite music of the modern punk era, and his turn toward pure electronic music has not dampened my enthusiasm one bit. Indeed, it seems like Scottās music evolves one step ahead of me, with him experimenting with new styles just as theyāre coming onto my radar. Indeed, Iāve been listening to more and more electronic music lately, and Alone / With Us fits in with artists Iāve enjoyed (like Mandy, Indiana and Rakta, for instance) while carrying forward the things I love most about Scottās previous music, namely his brilliant lyrics. The title of this EP is the name of the first two songs, and they seem like a matched pair here, the first song presenting a portrait of a loner who āhustlesā in the ādog eat dog world,ā while the second track shifts the perspective to a group (religious? professional? something even more sinister?) that targets those loners by offering them the sense of belonging they insist they donāt want but secretly crave. The music, like all of Scottās music, is just brilliant. There are no guitars here, just driving electronic drums and a symphony of synths playing off one another with the deftness of a well-seasoned band. Iām not articulate enough to explain what is so distinctive about Scottās music, but itās instantly identifiable here and Iām as in love with it as ever. If youāre a card-carrying member of the Scott Plant fan club like I am, you need this, but I canāt imagine any hardcore punk kid with a curiosity about electronic music wonāt love this.












