
Preening: Gang Laughter 12"
Oakland three-piece Preening is Max Nordile (saxophone, vocals), Alejandra Alcala (bass), and Sam Lefebvre (drums). Gang Laughter, mostly recorded in the summer of 2018 by HL Nelly at Santo in West Oakland, is Preeningâs first full-length. The album follows three 7âs on labels Ever/Never, Fine Concepts, and Digital Regress, and at least three self-released cassette tapes since 2017. Jackets screen-printed in Oakland by Fine Concepts.
Our take: Preening has put out a slew of records over the past few years and Gang Laughter is their first 12â. It continues with the format the band has honed on those previous releases: a catchy no wave / post-punk sound with locked-in bass and drums a la Gang of Four, a skronky saxophone, and two vocalists, one furious and one more deadpan. If you liked those earlier records, youâll enjoy Gang Laughter, but whatâs more exciting is how this record pushes at the edges of the bandâs sound. Specifically, thereâs a This Heat-style experimental streak that seems to run through the middle part of the record. The a-sideâs closing track, âRed,â double tracks the sax for an eerie effect and the only vocals come from a sinister-sounding laugh track. Then the b-side opens with âGL,â an instrumental that sounds like it features both a regular piano and a toy piano. âGLâ is the most This Heat-esque moment on the record, a spacious and winding composition that serves as a perfect counterpoint to the recordâs more aggressive tracks. Genre-pushing bands like Preening always walk a fine line between pushing their sound forward and maintaining a consistent voice, and Gang Laughter balances those adeptly. The beautiful screen printed packaging is a nice bonus too.
Oakland three-piece Preening is Max Nordile (saxophone, vocals), Alejandra Alcala (bass), and Sam Lefebvre (drums). Gang Laughter, mostly recorded in the summer of 2018 by HL Nelly at Santo in West Oakland, is Preeningâs first full-length. The album follows three 7âs on labels Ever/Never, Fine Concepts, and Digital Regress, and at least three self-released cassette tapes since 2017. Jackets screen-printed in Oakland by Fine Concepts.
Our take: Preening has put out a slew of records over the past few years and Gang Laughter is their first 12â. It continues with the format the band has honed on those previous releases: a catchy no wave / post-punk sound with locked-in bass and drums a la Gang of Four, a skronky saxophone, and two vocalists, one furious and one more deadpan. If you liked those earlier records, youâll enjoy Gang Laughter, but whatâs more exciting is how this record pushes at the edges of the bandâs sound. Specifically, thereâs a This Heat-style experimental streak that seems to run through the middle part of the record. The a-sideâs closing track, âRed,â double tracks the sax for an eerie effect and the only vocals come from a sinister-sounding laugh track. Then the b-side opens with âGL,â an instrumental that sounds like it features both a regular piano and a toy piano. âGLâ is the most This Heat-esque moment on the record, a spacious and winding composition that serves as a perfect counterpoint to the recordâs more aggressive tracks. Genre-pushing bands like Preening always walk a fine line between pushing their sound forward and maintaining a consistent voice, and Gang Laughter balances those adeptly. The beautiful screen printed packaging is a nice bonus too.
Original: $2,500.00
-70%$2,500.00
$750.00Description
Oakland three-piece Preening is Max Nordile (saxophone, vocals), Alejandra Alcala (bass), and Sam Lefebvre (drums). Gang Laughter, mostly recorded in the summer of 2018 by HL Nelly at Santo in West Oakland, is Preeningâs first full-length. The album follows three 7âs on labels Ever/Never, Fine Concepts, and Digital Regress, and at least three self-released cassette tapes since 2017. Jackets screen-printed in Oakland by Fine Concepts.
Our take: Preening has put out a slew of records over the past few years and Gang Laughter is their first 12â. It continues with the format the band has honed on those previous releases: a catchy no wave / post-punk sound with locked-in bass and drums a la Gang of Four, a skronky saxophone, and two vocalists, one furious and one more deadpan. If you liked those earlier records, youâll enjoy Gang Laughter, but whatâs more exciting is how this record pushes at the edges of the bandâs sound. Specifically, thereâs a This Heat-style experimental streak that seems to run through the middle part of the record. The a-sideâs closing track, âRed,â double tracks the sax for an eerie effect and the only vocals come from a sinister-sounding laugh track. Then the b-side opens with âGL,â an instrumental that sounds like it features both a regular piano and a toy piano. âGLâ is the most This Heat-esque moment on the record, a spacious and winding composition that serves as a perfect counterpoint to the recordâs more aggressive tracks. Genre-pushing bands like Preening always walk a fine line between pushing their sound forward and maintaining a consistent voice, and Gang Laughter balances those adeptly. The beautiful screen printed packaging is a nice bonus too.












