Qlowski: The Wound 12"
From the bits. From the scars. âThere is no beauty without the wound.
Furious, relentless, maybe less starry-eyed but at the same time profound, celestial and poetic, London concrete-punks Qlowski are back with âThe Woundâ their second album on Maple Death & Feel It Records, a record that feels like the culmination of their lives, politics and sense of community. Still led by the dual-force of Mickey and Cecilia, Qlowski has expanded into a collective with the addition of Christian, Lucy and James, creating a sense of urgency and sweeping palette that was only hinted at on their debut âQuale Futuro?â.
Dream-punk, propulsive rhythms, oblique kiwi-pop, dark punk are still part of their vocabulary but the band smashes borders with kosmische soundscapes, art-pop ballads, industrial beats and funked-up low-thud. Sonically impeccable, loaded with ear candy, the album was recorded in Dublin at Sonic Studios by Daniel Fox (Gilla Band) one of todayâs most innovative producers and âThe Woundâ ebbs and flows through syncopated grooves, abstraction and bliss, a work of contrast, dark-soft-heavy full cycle but mainly euphoric. The addition of drum pads, drum machines, electronics, analog pedals and field recordings are part of this process, it almost feels like a punk album for the club culture, where bodies and sweat are just one gear in bringing a community together.
Full of staples âDesireâ mixes anarcho-punk bleakness with New Order-ish ecstasy and Mickeyâs commanding vocal presence, âSurrenderâ almost feels like the Cure on a Martin Hannett diet of pills and reverb chambers, âIt May Changeâ and âMastering The Motionsâ dance on the cusp of angular funk, all wiry and bouncy recalling Pylon but also euro icons Kleenex. âPraxisâ and âStronger Thanâ show how far Qlowski has come, dream-pop ballads that shine though analog synths (Siel Orchestra, Juno) and Ceciâs heavenly delivery.
Spread out between London, New York and Glasgow, The Wound, is also the result of the dramatic past years we have been living in, written in between protests on the streets of London, rallies, Pro-Palestine marches, Rentersâ Union gatherings, a sense of helplessness spreading but also a euphoric determination to fight and bring social justice at all costs.
Even when you feel resolutely in the camp of the defeated, you should know, defeat has nothing to do with surrender. Qlowski are here to evolve, more determined than ever.Â
Black vinyl edition of 200 with poster zine.
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Qlowski: The Wound 12"
Qlowski: The Wound 12"
From the bits. From the scars. âThere is no beauty without the wound.
Furious, relentless, maybe less starry-eyed but at the same time profound, celestial and poetic, London concrete-punks Qlowski are back with âThe Woundâ their second album on Maple Death & Feel It Records, a record that feels like the culmination of their lives, politics and sense of community. Still led by the dual-force of Mickey and Cecilia, Qlowski has expanded into a collective with the addition of Christian, Lucy and James, creating a sense of urgency and sweeping palette that was only hinted at on their debut âQuale Futuro?â.
Dream-punk, propulsive rhythms, oblique kiwi-pop, dark punk are still part of their vocabulary but the band smashes borders with kosmische soundscapes, art-pop ballads, industrial beats and funked-up low-thud. Sonically impeccable, loaded with ear candy, the album was recorded in Dublin at Sonic Studios by Daniel Fox (Gilla Band) one of todayâs most innovative producers and âThe Woundâ ebbs and flows through syncopated grooves, abstraction and bliss, a work of contrast, dark-soft-heavy full cycle but mainly euphoric. The addition of drum pads, drum machines, electronics, analog pedals and field recordings are part of this process, it almost feels like a punk album for the club culture, where bodies and sweat are just one gear in bringing a community together.
Full of staples âDesireâ mixes anarcho-punk bleakness with New Order-ish ecstasy and Mickeyâs commanding vocal presence, âSurrenderâ almost feels like the Cure on a Martin Hannett diet of pills and reverb chambers, âIt May Changeâ and âMastering The Motionsâ dance on the cusp of angular funk, all wiry and bouncy recalling Pylon but also euro icons Kleenex. âPraxisâ and âStronger Thanâ show how far Qlowski has come, dream-pop ballads that shine though analog synths (Siel Orchestra, Juno) and Ceciâs heavenly delivery.
Spread out between London, New York and Glasgow, The Wound, is also the result of the dramatic past years we have been living in, written in between protests on the streets of London, rallies, Pro-Palestine marches, Rentersâ Union gatherings, a sense of helplessness spreading but also a euphoric determination to fight and bring social justice at all costs.
Even when you feel resolutely in the camp of the defeated, you should know, defeat has nothing to do with surrender. Qlowski are here to evolve, more determined than ever.Â
Black vinyl edition of 200 with poster zine.
Product Information
Product Information
Shipping & Returns
Shipping & Returns
Description
From the bits. From the scars. âThere is no beauty without the wound.
Furious, relentless, maybe less starry-eyed but at the same time profound, celestial and poetic, London concrete-punks Qlowski are back with âThe Woundâ their second album on Maple Death & Feel It Records, a record that feels like the culmination of their lives, politics and sense of community. Still led by the dual-force of Mickey and Cecilia, Qlowski has expanded into a collective with the addition of Christian, Lucy and James, creating a sense of urgency and sweeping palette that was only hinted at on their debut âQuale Futuro?â.
Dream-punk, propulsive rhythms, oblique kiwi-pop, dark punk are still part of their vocabulary but the band smashes borders with kosmische soundscapes, art-pop ballads, industrial beats and funked-up low-thud. Sonically impeccable, loaded with ear candy, the album was recorded in Dublin at Sonic Studios by Daniel Fox (Gilla Band) one of todayâs most innovative producers and âThe Woundâ ebbs and flows through syncopated grooves, abstraction and bliss, a work of contrast, dark-soft-heavy full cycle but mainly euphoric. The addition of drum pads, drum machines, electronics, analog pedals and field recordings are part of this process, it almost feels like a punk album for the club culture, where bodies and sweat are just one gear in bringing a community together.
Full of staples âDesireâ mixes anarcho-punk bleakness with New Order-ish ecstasy and Mickeyâs commanding vocal presence, âSurrenderâ almost feels like the Cure on a Martin Hannett diet of pills and reverb chambers, âIt May Changeâ and âMastering The Motionsâ dance on the cusp of angular funk, all wiry and bouncy recalling Pylon but also euro icons Kleenex. âPraxisâ and âStronger Thanâ show how far Qlowski has come, dream-pop ballads that shine though analog synths (Siel Orchestra, Juno) and Ceciâs heavenly delivery.
Spread out between London, New York and Glasgow, The Wound, is also the result of the dramatic past years we have been living in, written in between protests on the streets of London, rallies, Pro-Palestine marches, Rentersâ Union gatherings, a sense of helplessness spreading but also a euphoric determination to fight and bring social justice at all costs.
Even when you feel resolutely in the camp of the defeated, you should know, defeat has nothing to do with surrender. Qlowski are here to evolve, more determined than ever.Â
Black vinyl edition of 200 with poster zine.











