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Archers of Loaf: Reason in Decline 12" (North Carolina edition)
As sculpted shards of guitarātumbling, tolling, squallingāshower the jittery bounce of a piano on opener āHuman,ā itās obvious thatĀ Reason in Decline,Ā ArchersĀ ofĀ Loafās first album in 24 years, will be more than a nostalgic, low-impact reboot. When they emerged from North Carolinaās ā90s indie-punk incubator, theĀ Archersā hurtling, sly, gloriously dissonant roar was a mythologized touchstone of slacker-era refusal. But this, the distilled shudder of āHumanā (as in āItās hard to be human / When only death can set you freeā), is an entirely different noise. In fact, itās a startling revelation.
Ā
A few distinctions between 2022Ā ArchersĀ and the Clinton-era crewāwhose āSouth Carolinaā could be heard blaring out of Jordan Catalanoās car radio on ABC teen-angst epicĀ My So-Called Life. First, guitaristsĀ Eric BachmannĀ andĀ Eric Johnson, once headstrong smartasses inciting a series of artful pileups on the bandās four studio albums and EP, are now a fluidly complementary, sonically advanced unit. Notably, Johnsonās signature trebly lines peal clearly above the din instead of struggling to be heard. Second, singer-songwriter Bachmann, after throat surgery, relearned how to sing (this time from his diaphragm); as a result, he no longer howls like the angriest head cold on the Eastern Seaboard. And now, his lyrics balance righteous wrath with a complex tangle of adult perspective. He still spits bile, but itās less likely to concern scene politics, music trends, or shady record labels thwarting the dreams of a young rock band.
Ā
Bachmann puts it bluntly: āWhat I really think about going back to theĀ ArchersĀ and doing a new record is that the three other members of this band are awesome. Itās not about responding to the past or whatever our bullshit legacy is. I just wanted to work with these guys because I knew the chemistry we had and that we still have. I knew that was rare. I didnāt care what it ended up sounding like.ā
Ā
ArchersĀ ofĀ Loafās first tour of duty ended after 1998āsĀ White Trash Heroes. The album did not raise the bandās once touted commercial roof, and the membersāBachmann, Johnson, bassistĀ Matt Gentling, and drummerĀ Mark PriceĀ started drifting in different directions with other projects & real life. Price was unable to play without extreme pain due to carpal tunnel syndrome. Bachmann itched to try a different musical approach. Everyone was tapped out in one way or another. Though the four remained good friends and convened for occasional reunion gigs (to support Mergeās 2011ā12 album reissues, for instance), they never worked on new music. Gentling had joinedĀ Band of Horses; Johnson, now a criminal defense attorney in Asheville, North Carolina, contributed guitar to projects when he had the time. On his own, Bachmann thrived, releasing 11 albums of atmospheric, folky rock/pop under his own name or āgroupā monikerĀ Crooked Fingers. In recent years, heād toured as a sideman/foil for torch-country starĀ Neko Case.
Ā
A few distinctions between 2022Ā ArchersĀ and the Clinton-era crewāwhose āSouth Carolinaā could be heard blaring out of Jordan Catalanoās car radio on ABC teen-angst epicĀ My So-Called Life. First, guitaristsĀ Eric BachmannĀ andĀ Eric Johnson, once headstrong smartasses inciting a series of artful pileups on the bandās four studio albums and EP, are now a fluidly complementary, sonically advanced unit. Notably, Johnsonās signature trebly lines peal clearly above the din instead of struggling to be heard. Second, singer-songwriter Bachmann, after throat surgery, relearned how to sing (this time from his diaphragm); as a result, he no longer howls like the angriest head cold on the Eastern Seaboard. And now, his lyrics balance righteous wrath with a complex tangle of adult perspective. He still spits bile, but itās less likely to concern scene politics, music trends, or shady record labels thwarting the dreams of a young rock band.
Ā
Bachmann puts it bluntly: āWhat I really think about going back to theĀ ArchersĀ and doing a new record is that the three other members of this band are awesome. Itās not about responding to the past or whatever our bullshit legacy is. I just wanted to work with these guys because I knew the chemistry we had and that we still have. I knew that was rare. I didnāt care what it ended up sounding like.ā
Ā
ArchersĀ ofĀ Loafās first tour of duty ended after 1998āsĀ White Trash Heroes. The album did not raise the bandās once touted commercial roof, and the membersāBachmann, Johnson, bassistĀ Matt Gentling, and drummerĀ Mark PriceĀ started drifting in different directions with other projects & real life. Price was unable to play without extreme pain due to carpal tunnel syndrome. Bachmann itched to try a different musical approach. Everyone was tapped out in one way or another. Though the four remained good friends and convened for occasional reunion gigs (to support Mergeās 2011ā12 album reissues, for instance), they never worked on new music. Gentling had joinedĀ Band of Horses; Johnson, now a criminal defense attorney in Asheville, North Carolina, contributed guitar to projects when he had the time. On his own, Bachmann thrived, releasing 11 albums of atmospheric, folky rock/pop under his own name or āgroupā monikerĀ Crooked Fingers. In recent years, heād toured as a sideman/foil for torch-country starĀ Neko Case.
Ā
But chemistry is a funny thing, asĀ ArchersĀ had the good fortune of learning following the recording of two different 7-inches of new materialāĀ Raleigh Days / Street Fighting ManĀ (released on Record Store Day 2020) &Ā Talking Over Talk. Despite playing together only a handful of times live during their hiatus (mostly playing older material), the band knew there was still something to be unpacked. Their work wasn't finished. They're older & smarter. Still pissed, no doubt (how could anyone not be right now?), but even better at processing it & turning it into a staggering piece of guitar art. Merge Records &Ā ArchersĀ ofĀ LoafĀ are proud to present to you theĀ Reason in Decline.
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Archers of Loaf: Reason in Decline 12" (North Carolina edition)
Archers of Loaf: Reason in Decline 12" (North Carolina edition)
As sculpted shards of guitarātumbling, tolling, squallingāshower the jittery bounce of a piano on opener āHuman,ā itās obvious thatĀ Reason in Decline,Ā ArchersĀ ofĀ Loafās first album in 24 years, will be more than a nostalgic, low-impact reboot. When they emerged from North Carolinaās ā90s indie-punk incubator, theĀ Archersā hurtling, sly, gloriously dissonant roar was a mythologized touchstone of slacker-era refusal. But this, the distilled shudder of āHumanā (as in āItās hard to be human / When only death can set you freeā), is an entirely different noise. In fact, itās a startling revelation.
Ā
A few distinctions between 2022Ā ArchersĀ and the Clinton-era crewāwhose āSouth Carolinaā could be heard blaring out of Jordan Catalanoās car radio on ABC teen-angst epicĀ My So-Called Life. First, guitaristsĀ Eric BachmannĀ andĀ Eric Johnson, once headstrong smartasses inciting a series of artful pileups on the bandās four studio albums and EP, are now a fluidly complementary, sonically advanced unit. Notably, Johnsonās signature trebly lines peal clearly above the din instead of struggling to be heard. Second, singer-songwriter Bachmann, after throat surgery, relearned how to sing (this time from his diaphragm); as a result, he no longer howls like the angriest head cold on the Eastern Seaboard. And now, his lyrics balance righteous wrath with a complex tangle of adult perspective. He still spits bile, but itās less likely to concern scene politics, music trends, or shady record labels thwarting the dreams of a young rock band.
Ā
Bachmann puts it bluntly: āWhat I really think about going back to theĀ ArchersĀ and doing a new record is that the three other members of this band are awesome. Itās not about responding to the past or whatever our bullshit legacy is. I just wanted to work with these guys because I knew the chemistry we had and that we still have. I knew that was rare. I didnāt care what it ended up sounding like.ā
Ā
ArchersĀ ofĀ Loafās first tour of duty ended after 1998āsĀ White Trash Heroes. The album did not raise the bandās once touted commercial roof, and the membersāBachmann, Johnson, bassistĀ Matt Gentling, and drummerĀ Mark PriceĀ started drifting in different directions with other projects & real life. Price was unable to play without extreme pain due to carpal tunnel syndrome. Bachmann itched to try a different musical approach. Everyone was tapped out in one way or another. Though the four remained good friends and convened for occasional reunion gigs (to support Mergeās 2011ā12 album reissues, for instance), they never worked on new music. Gentling had joinedĀ Band of Horses; Johnson, now a criminal defense attorney in Asheville, North Carolina, contributed guitar to projects when he had the time. On his own, Bachmann thrived, releasing 11 albums of atmospheric, folky rock/pop under his own name or āgroupā monikerĀ Crooked Fingers. In recent years, heād toured as a sideman/foil for torch-country starĀ Neko Case.
Ā
A few distinctions between 2022Ā ArchersĀ and the Clinton-era crewāwhose āSouth Carolinaā could be heard blaring out of Jordan Catalanoās car radio on ABC teen-angst epicĀ My So-Called Life. First, guitaristsĀ Eric BachmannĀ andĀ Eric Johnson, once headstrong smartasses inciting a series of artful pileups on the bandās four studio albums and EP, are now a fluidly complementary, sonically advanced unit. Notably, Johnsonās signature trebly lines peal clearly above the din instead of struggling to be heard. Second, singer-songwriter Bachmann, after throat surgery, relearned how to sing (this time from his diaphragm); as a result, he no longer howls like the angriest head cold on the Eastern Seaboard. And now, his lyrics balance righteous wrath with a complex tangle of adult perspective. He still spits bile, but itās less likely to concern scene politics, music trends, or shady record labels thwarting the dreams of a young rock band.
Ā
Bachmann puts it bluntly: āWhat I really think about going back to theĀ ArchersĀ and doing a new record is that the three other members of this band are awesome. Itās not about responding to the past or whatever our bullshit legacy is. I just wanted to work with these guys because I knew the chemistry we had and that we still have. I knew that was rare. I didnāt care what it ended up sounding like.ā
Ā
ArchersĀ ofĀ Loafās first tour of duty ended after 1998āsĀ White Trash Heroes. The album did not raise the bandās once touted commercial roof, and the membersāBachmann, Johnson, bassistĀ Matt Gentling, and drummerĀ Mark PriceĀ started drifting in different directions with other projects & real life. Price was unable to play without extreme pain due to carpal tunnel syndrome. Bachmann itched to try a different musical approach. Everyone was tapped out in one way or another. Though the four remained good friends and convened for occasional reunion gigs (to support Mergeās 2011ā12 album reissues, for instance), they never worked on new music. Gentling had joinedĀ Band of Horses; Johnson, now a criminal defense attorney in Asheville, North Carolina, contributed guitar to projects when he had the time. On his own, Bachmann thrived, releasing 11 albums of atmospheric, folky rock/pop under his own name or āgroupā monikerĀ Crooked Fingers. In recent years, heād toured as a sideman/foil for torch-country starĀ Neko Case.
Ā
But chemistry is a funny thing, asĀ ArchersĀ had the good fortune of learning following the recording of two different 7-inches of new materialāĀ Raleigh Days / Street Fighting ManĀ (released on Record Store Day 2020) &Ā Talking Over Talk. Despite playing together only a handful of times live during their hiatus (mostly playing older material), the band knew there was still something to be unpacked. Their work wasn't finished. They're older & smarter. Still pissed, no doubt (how could anyone not be right now?), but even better at processing it & turning it into a staggering piece of guitar art. Merge Records &Ā ArchersĀ ofĀ LoafĀ are proud to present to you theĀ Reason in Decline.
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-70%Archers of Loaf: Reason in Decline 12" (North Carolina edition)ā
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Description
As sculpted shards of guitarātumbling, tolling, squallingāshower the jittery bounce of a piano on opener āHuman,ā itās obvious thatĀ Reason in Decline,Ā ArchersĀ ofĀ Loafās first album in 24 years, will be more than a nostalgic, low-impact reboot. When they emerged from North Carolinaās ā90s indie-punk incubator, theĀ Archersā hurtling, sly, gloriously dissonant roar was a mythologized touchstone of slacker-era refusal. But this, the distilled shudder of āHumanā (as in āItās hard to be human / When only death can set you freeā), is an entirely different noise. In fact, itās a startling revelation.
Ā
A few distinctions between 2022Ā ArchersĀ and the Clinton-era crewāwhose āSouth Carolinaā could be heard blaring out of Jordan Catalanoās car radio on ABC teen-angst epicĀ My So-Called Life. First, guitaristsĀ Eric BachmannĀ andĀ Eric Johnson, once headstrong smartasses inciting a series of artful pileups on the bandās four studio albums and EP, are now a fluidly complementary, sonically advanced unit. Notably, Johnsonās signature trebly lines peal clearly above the din instead of struggling to be heard. Second, singer-songwriter Bachmann, after throat surgery, relearned how to sing (this time from his diaphragm); as a result, he no longer howls like the angriest head cold on the Eastern Seaboard. And now, his lyrics balance righteous wrath with a complex tangle of adult perspective. He still spits bile, but itās less likely to concern scene politics, music trends, or shady record labels thwarting the dreams of a young rock band.
Ā
Bachmann puts it bluntly: āWhat I really think about going back to theĀ ArchersĀ and doing a new record is that the three other members of this band are awesome. Itās not about responding to the past or whatever our bullshit legacy is. I just wanted to work with these guys because I knew the chemistry we had and that we still have. I knew that was rare. I didnāt care what it ended up sounding like.ā
Ā
ArchersĀ ofĀ Loafās first tour of duty ended after 1998āsĀ White Trash Heroes. The album did not raise the bandās once touted commercial roof, and the membersāBachmann, Johnson, bassistĀ Matt Gentling, and drummerĀ Mark PriceĀ started drifting in different directions with other projects & real life. Price was unable to play without extreme pain due to carpal tunnel syndrome. Bachmann itched to try a different musical approach. Everyone was tapped out in one way or another. Though the four remained good friends and convened for occasional reunion gigs (to support Mergeās 2011ā12 album reissues, for instance), they never worked on new music. Gentling had joinedĀ Band of Horses; Johnson, now a criminal defense attorney in Asheville, North Carolina, contributed guitar to projects when he had the time. On his own, Bachmann thrived, releasing 11 albums of atmospheric, folky rock/pop under his own name or āgroupā monikerĀ Crooked Fingers. In recent years, heād toured as a sideman/foil for torch-country starĀ Neko Case.
Ā
A few distinctions between 2022Ā ArchersĀ and the Clinton-era crewāwhose āSouth Carolinaā could be heard blaring out of Jordan Catalanoās car radio on ABC teen-angst epicĀ My So-Called Life. First, guitaristsĀ Eric BachmannĀ andĀ Eric Johnson, once headstrong smartasses inciting a series of artful pileups on the bandās four studio albums and EP, are now a fluidly complementary, sonically advanced unit. Notably, Johnsonās signature trebly lines peal clearly above the din instead of struggling to be heard. Second, singer-songwriter Bachmann, after throat surgery, relearned how to sing (this time from his diaphragm); as a result, he no longer howls like the angriest head cold on the Eastern Seaboard. And now, his lyrics balance righteous wrath with a complex tangle of adult perspective. He still spits bile, but itās less likely to concern scene politics, music trends, or shady record labels thwarting the dreams of a young rock band.
Ā
Bachmann puts it bluntly: āWhat I really think about going back to theĀ ArchersĀ and doing a new record is that the three other members of this band are awesome. Itās not about responding to the past or whatever our bullshit legacy is. I just wanted to work with these guys because I knew the chemistry we had and that we still have. I knew that was rare. I didnāt care what it ended up sounding like.ā
Ā
ArchersĀ ofĀ Loafās first tour of duty ended after 1998āsĀ White Trash Heroes. The album did not raise the bandās once touted commercial roof, and the membersāBachmann, Johnson, bassistĀ Matt Gentling, and drummerĀ Mark PriceĀ started drifting in different directions with other projects & real life. Price was unable to play without extreme pain due to carpal tunnel syndrome. Bachmann itched to try a different musical approach. Everyone was tapped out in one way or another. Though the four remained good friends and convened for occasional reunion gigs (to support Mergeās 2011ā12 album reissues, for instance), they never worked on new music. Gentling had joinedĀ Band of Horses; Johnson, now a criminal defense attorney in Asheville, North Carolina, contributed guitar to projects when he had the time. On his own, Bachmann thrived, releasing 11 albums of atmospheric, folky rock/pop under his own name or āgroupā monikerĀ Crooked Fingers. In recent years, heād toured as a sideman/foil for torch-country starĀ Neko Case.
Ā
But chemistry is a funny thing, asĀ ArchersĀ had the good fortune of learning following the recording of two different 7-inches of new materialāĀ Raleigh Days / Street Fighting ManĀ (released on Record Store Day 2020) &Ā Talking Over Talk. Despite playing together only a handful of times live during their hiatus (mostly playing older material), the band knew there was still something to be unpacked. Their work wasn't finished. They're older & smarter. Still pissed, no doubt (how could anyone not be right now?), but even better at processing it & turning it into a staggering piece of guitar art. Merge Records &Ā ArchersĀ ofĀ LoafĀ are proud to present to you theĀ Reason in Decline.











