
I’m not going to get all flowery and poetic on this one. I’m just going to say: Buy this record.
Alright, I’ll also say that I tried to be strong. While everyone else was going cuckoo for
Cold Cave, I tried to maintain my composure. What’s the big deal, I wondered. This is nothing new. It reminds me of so many late Nineties sounds from the Mute label. It reminds me of Erasure, and so many dark Eighties pop bands. Ah, but wait, it also sort of reminds me of
Bad Moon Rising–era
Sonic Youth. And, shit, it reminds of Serge Gainsbourg, too.
Who the hell is in this band, anyway?
Oh, Wesley Eisold from Give Up The Ghost, and Caralee McElroy from
Xiu Xiu, and now Sarah Lipstate of Noveller,
and noise artist, Dominick Fernow! And, god damn it, after listening to “Life Magazine” once and then having to listen to it again 15 times more before I could finally stop myself and move on with my life, I realized that Cold Cave was doing something special, and I went straight out to
Hospital on 3rd, between 1st and 2nd, and I got into some long, rambling discussion with
Anthony Mangicapra about noise and
Zola Jesus and vinyl and hi-fi, and I felt rejuvenated, munificent, downright
free, and I bought every fucking Cold Cave record I could buy.
They’re all good. You should buy them, too.
Oh, I’ll also mention that an original pressing of
Love Comes Close might be hard to find for those of you outside the New York City area. The album flew like mad from the shelves of independent record shops and landed onto so many happy turntables. You might still be able to order it from Hospital Productions. If not, you’re nevertheless in luck: The smart folks at
Matador caught on a whole lot faster than me, and their reissue of
Love Comes Close will be available on November 3. If you’re hungry for a taste before then, you can pick up the 12” single,
Death Comes Close, due out on October 20.