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Red Bloom of the Boom

Bear In Heaven

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Album Review

Starting with a scraggly shimmer that sounds like a cross between a dying keyboard and an alarm drone from the robot wars (whenever they'll be fought), Red Bloom of the Boom gets this much right at the start — it's not another tunefully epic guitar production for indie rock dreamers, and for that listeners should all be duly grateful. If anything, Bear in Heaven sound enjoyably out of place, with their obvious love for whatever post-rock became in the late '90s transmuted into immediate but not dumbed-down catchiness; lead figure Jon Philpot's soft register doesn't sound like a wistful waif so much as an underrated figure like Butterfly Child's Joe Cassidy (if at times crossed with Doug Martsch's reflective dreaminess, but at least he never sounds like he's going to start putting together mix CD-Rs based on Wes Anderson soundtracks). The seven songs on Red Bloom of the Boom continually shift around, playing the soft/loud card in a way that doesn't sound anything like nth-generation Pixies or Nirvana — if it's not anywhere near Miles Davis and Teo Macero cutting up hours of tapes for their own purposes, at least it acknowledges other ways of songwriting. Cleverer standouts include "Slow Gold," with its touching on everything from soft harmonies to slashing rock doom, and "Fraternal Noon," all ominous drone mystery with a calm vocal glaze over the top. Meanwhile, more straightforward songs like "Werewolf" (soft start, loud midsection, soft conclusion) and "Shining and Free," if they verge on simply being there rather than getting and holding the attention, still flow nicely enough with the rest of the album. On the whole, Red Bloom of the Boom, if it won't immediately stand out in today's music universe, deserves attention as a calm pleasure.

Customer Reviews

Sweet and painful

Soul-baring, almost embarrassingly honest. Compelling, subtle sonic layers. I felt like I was taken on a journey to a landscape constructed of gems and corpses. In case you're wondering that's a good thing.

Unigue Masterpeice

This is the best kept secret since listerine pocket packs! Don't be afraid to share with those around you. You will all benefit greatly. Bear in Heaven have crafted a true gem that stands in a class of it's own. It doesn't really fit in well with the current state of music, but it probably never will. Enjoy these songs because they are enjoyable, unfiltered, expansive sound that you rarely can find in today's market.

Magnificent

By far, the most inventive and imaginative new band out there. No words will describe what you hear. Puts faith back into a regurgitating music scene.

Biography

Formed: Brooklyn, New York, NY

Genre: Alternative

Years Active: '00s

The Brooklyn-based Bear in Heaven was initially started in 1998 as a way for Jon Philpot, who was then still living in his hometown of Atlanta, to express his musical ideas during the off hours of a local recording studio. After he moved to Brooklyn at the end of the decade, Philpot continued working on his music, which included the duo Presocratics, who released a couple of records on the experimental label Table of the Elements. During the next couple of years, as more friends and associates from...
Full Bio
Red Bloom of the Boom, Bear In Heaven
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