Description
For their seventh album, Bend Beyond, Woods got dark. Its not that they werent dark beforewhen you really get in there and listen, Jeremy Earl is singing about some heavy stuff, but its hidden under his gorgeous falsetto and sometimes obtuse lyrics. On Bend Beyond, though, Earl and company fully embrace that darkness.
Album opener Bend Beyond has long been a jammy live staple, but here its compact and tight with a stuttered guitar line and a world ending collision of instruments. Meanwhile Is It Honest jangles along happily until you notice Earl is in a more destructive zone than the bright music initially suggests, singing Its so fucking hard to see as both a form of comfort and an act of despair.
Instrumentally, Bend Beyond is certainly the most full Woods record yet; guitars weave and bubble across peppy drumming, but lyrically Earl is at his most direct and spare. While previous albums sounded like they went directly from Earls brain to tape with minimal outside interference, Bend Beyond is lush and full-bodied, the work of a band in perfect, heavy harmony. Listening to the record as a whole, it feels like the most daring leap Woods has made yet: It captures the bands live intensity, but keeps the intimate sadness that made them so great in the first place. Sam Hockley-Smith
Seventh album from New York band
Limited vinyl edition packaged in a deluxe gatefold jacket with printed inner sleeve and digital download coupon






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