đ Up to 70% Off Selected ItemsShop Sale

XV: On The Creekbeds On The Thrones 12"
âOn the Creekbeds On the Thronesâ is the second LP by XV, a limitless, fiery, deep-breath of a record. Where their 2019 debut had a startling, first-kiss energy, âCreekbedsâ is reflective, momentous, poetic. Textures multiply, evoking both the endlessness of sky and the terror of a bottomless well. Thereâs a daring sort of faith in these songs, the way the three members trust in the resonance and persistence and joy built into each song and the way they trust in each other. This faith provides a tender, messy space for thoughts, feelings, outbursts, joys, and sadnesses. The observations made on this record â from petty irritations to existential crises â are articulated in a way that feels always like solidarity, never like whining. Paired with the tumbling snarl of the instruments, the songs project a kind of clumsy telepathy, a heartfelt exchange that is both confrontational and deeply welcoming.
Our take: On the Creekbeds on the Thrones is the second album from Michiganâs XV. XVâs first album looms large in my consciousness⊠I didnât hear about it until a year after it came out, but once I heard it, I couldnât stop listening. (You can read the staff pick in which I raved about it here.) Perhaps itâs because I listen to so much hardcore, but XVâs music felt like the perfect counterpoint to my usual listening diet, like a yoga position that pulls your limbs in the opposite of your habitual direction and releases a flood of endorphins. Whereas hardcore is tightly structured, aggressive, heavy, and (often, at least) macho, XVâs music is feminine, loose, and airy, seeming to drift in and out of existence like some kind of wood nymph. On the Creekbeds on the Thrones picks up where the bandâs first album left off... like that record, it feels like a glimpse into someone elseâs consciousness. XV has called their music âfree punk,â and like free jazz it eschews the rigidity of structure that almost all other punk music takes as a given. Take a track like âTasmanian Angels,â which starts off as a ramshackle, Television Personalities-style twee punk tune, but over the course of its three minutes unravels into a vaguely Eastern-sounding jam that could be an outtake from one of the Velvet Undergroundâs first two albums or even one of Alice Coltraneâs early solo records. Throughout the album, XV floats between more ârockâ moments and passages that are freer (and usually quieter), but it feels less like changing gears and more like a natural process such as evaporation or freezing, happening so incrementally that you canât pinpoint when it moves from one mode to another. I can see someoneâespecially someone who doesnât feel like they need a counterpoint to the punk that dominates their soundtrackâfinding this aimless, or even finding stream-of-consciousness lyrics to songs like âPenâ and âFresh Lettuceâ too artless. For me, though, XVâs music transports me somewhere no other band can take me.
Our take: On the Creekbeds on the Thrones is the second album from Michiganâs XV. XVâs first album looms large in my consciousness⊠I didnât hear about it until a year after it came out, but once I heard it, I couldnât stop listening. (You can read the staff pick in which I raved about it here.) Perhaps itâs because I listen to so much hardcore, but XVâs music felt like the perfect counterpoint to my usual listening diet, like a yoga position that pulls your limbs in the opposite of your habitual direction and releases a flood of endorphins. Whereas hardcore is tightly structured, aggressive, heavy, and (often, at least) macho, XVâs music is feminine, loose, and airy, seeming to drift in and out of existence like some kind of wood nymph. On the Creekbeds on the Thrones picks up where the bandâs first album left off... like that record, it feels like a glimpse into someone elseâs consciousness. XV has called their music âfree punk,â and like free jazz it eschews the rigidity of structure that almost all other punk music takes as a given. Take a track like âTasmanian Angels,â which starts off as a ramshackle, Television Personalities-style twee punk tune, but over the course of its three minutes unravels into a vaguely Eastern-sounding jam that could be an outtake from one of the Velvet Undergroundâs first two albums or even one of Alice Coltraneâs early solo records. Throughout the album, XV floats between more ârockâ moments and passages that are freer (and usually quieter), but it feels less like changing gears and more like a natural process such as evaporation or freezing, happening so incrementally that you canât pinpoint when it moves from one mode to another. I can see someoneâespecially someone who doesnât feel like they need a counterpoint to the punk that dominates their soundtrackâfinding this aimless, or even finding stream-of-consciousness lyrics to songs like âPenâ and âFresh Lettuceâ too artless. For me, though, XVâs music transports me somewhere no other band can take me.
âOn the Creekbeds On the Thronesâ is the second LP by XV, a limitless, fiery, deep-breath of a record. Where their 2019 debut had a startling, first-kiss energy, âCreekbedsâ is reflective, momentous, poetic. Textures multiply, evoking both the endlessness of sky and the terror of a bottomless well. Thereâs a daring sort of faith in these songs, the way the three members trust in the resonance and persistence and joy built into each song and the way they trust in each other. This faith provides a tender, messy space for thoughts, feelings, outbursts, joys, and sadnesses. The observations made on this record â from petty irritations to existential crises â are articulated in a way that feels always like solidarity, never like whining. Paired with the tumbling snarl of the instruments, the songs project a kind of clumsy telepathy, a heartfelt exchange that is both confrontational and deeply welcoming.
Our take: On the Creekbeds on the Thrones is the second album from Michiganâs XV. XVâs first album looms large in my consciousness⊠I didnât hear about it until a year after it came out, but once I heard it, I couldnât stop listening. (You can read the staff pick in which I raved about it here.) Perhaps itâs because I listen to so much hardcore, but XVâs music felt like the perfect counterpoint to my usual listening diet, like a yoga position that pulls your limbs in the opposite of your habitual direction and releases a flood of endorphins. Whereas hardcore is tightly structured, aggressive, heavy, and (often, at least) macho, XVâs music is feminine, loose, and airy, seeming to drift in and out of existence like some kind of wood nymph. On the Creekbeds on the Thrones picks up where the bandâs first album left off... like that record, it feels like a glimpse into someone elseâs consciousness. XV has called their music âfree punk,â and like free jazz it eschews the rigidity of structure that almost all other punk music takes as a given. Take a track like âTasmanian Angels,â which starts off as a ramshackle, Television Personalities-style twee punk tune, but over the course of its three minutes unravels into a vaguely Eastern-sounding jam that could be an outtake from one of the Velvet Undergroundâs first two albums or even one of Alice Coltraneâs early solo records. Throughout the album, XV floats between more ârockâ moments and passages that are freer (and usually quieter), but it feels less like changing gears and more like a natural process such as evaporation or freezing, happening so incrementally that you canât pinpoint when it moves from one mode to another. I can see someoneâespecially someone who doesnât feel like they need a counterpoint to the punk that dominates their soundtrackâfinding this aimless, or even finding stream-of-consciousness lyrics to songs like âPenâ and âFresh Lettuceâ too artless. For me, though, XVâs music transports me somewhere no other band can take me.
Our take: On the Creekbeds on the Thrones is the second album from Michiganâs XV. XVâs first album looms large in my consciousness⊠I didnât hear about it until a year after it came out, but once I heard it, I couldnât stop listening. (You can read the staff pick in which I raved about it here.) Perhaps itâs because I listen to so much hardcore, but XVâs music felt like the perfect counterpoint to my usual listening diet, like a yoga position that pulls your limbs in the opposite of your habitual direction and releases a flood of endorphins. Whereas hardcore is tightly structured, aggressive, heavy, and (often, at least) macho, XVâs music is feminine, loose, and airy, seeming to drift in and out of existence like some kind of wood nymph. On the Creekbeds on the Thrones picks up where the bandâs first album left off... like that record, it feels like a glimpse into someone elseâs consciousness. XV has called their music âfree punk,â and like free jazz it eschews the rigidity of structure that almost all other punk music takes as a given. Take a track like âTasmanian Angels,â which starts off as a ramshackle, Television Personalities-style twee punk tune, but over the course of its three minutes unravels into a vaguely Eastern-sounding jam that could be an outtake from one of the Velvet Undergroundâs first two albums or even one of Alice Coltraneâs early solo records. Throughout the album, XV floats between more ârockâ moments and passages that are freer (and usually quieter), but it feels less like changing gears and more like a natural process such as evaporation or freezing, happening so incrementally that you canât pinpoint when it moves from one mode to another. I can see someoneâespecially someone who doesnât feel like they need a counterpoint to the punk that dominates their soundtrackâfinding this aimless, or even finding stream-of-consciousness lyrics to songs like âPenâ and âFresh Lettuceâ too artless. For me, though, XVâs music transports me somewhere no other band can take me.
$3,300.00
XV: On The Creekbeds On The Thrones 12"â
$3,300.00
Description
âOn the Creekbeds On the Thronesâ is the second LP by XV, a limitless, fiery, deep-breath of a record. Where their 2019 debut had a startling, first-kiss energy, âCreekbedsâ is reflective, momentous, poetic. Textures multiply, evoking both the endlessness of sky and the terror of a bottomless well. Thereâs a daring sort of faith in these songs, the way the three members trust in the resonance and persistence and joy built into each song and the way they trust in each other. This faith provides a tender, messy space for thoughts, feelings, outbursts, joys, and sadnesses. The observations made on this record â from petty irritations to existential crises â are articulated in a way that feels always like solidarity, never like whining. Paired with the tumbling snarl of the instruments, the songs project a kind of clumsy telepathy, a heartfelt exchange that is both confrontational and deeply welcoming.
Our take: On the Creekbeds on the Thrones is the second album from Michiganâs XV. XVâs first album looms large in my consciousness⊠I didnât hear about it until a year after it came out, but once I heard it, I couldnât stop listening. (You can read the staff pick in which I raved about it here.) Perhaps itâs because I listen to so much hardcore, but XVâs music felt like the perfect counterpoint to my usual listening diet, like a yoga position that pulls your limbs in the opposite of your habitual direction and releases a flood of endorphins. Whereas hardcore is tightly structured, aggressive, heavy, and (often, at least) macho, XVâs music is feminine, loose, and airy, seeming to drift in and out of existence like some kind of wood nymph. On the Creekbeds on the Thrones picks up where the bandâs first album left off... like that record, it feels like a glimpse into someone elseâs consciousness. XV has called their music âfree punk,â and like free jazz it eschews the rigidity of structure that almost all other punk music takes as a given. Take a track like âTasmanian Angels,â which starts off as a ramshackle, Television Personalities-style twee punk tune, but over the course of its three minutes unravels into a vaguely Eastern-sounding jam that could be an outtake from one of the Velvet Undergroundâs first two albums or even one of Alice Coltraneâs early solo records. Throughout the album, XV floats between more ârockâ moments and passages that are freer (and usually quieter), but it feels less like changing gears and more like a natural process such as evaporation or freezing, happening so incrementally that you canât pinpoint when it moves from one mode to another. I can see someoneâespecially someone who doesnât feel like they need a counterpoint to the punk that dominates their soundtrackâfinding this aimless, or even finding stream-of-consciousness lyrics to songs like âPenâ and âFresh Lettuceâ too artless. For me, though, XVâs music transports me somewhere no other band can take me.
Our take: On the Creekbeds on the Thrones is the second album from Michiganâs XV. XVâs first album looms large in my consciousness⊠I didnât hear about it until a year after it came out, but once I heard it, I couldnât stop listening. (You can read the staff pick in which I raved about it here.) Perhaps itâs because I listen to so much hardcore, but XVâs music felt like the perfect counterpoint to my usual listening diet, like a yoga position that pulls your limbs in the opposite of your habitual direction and releases a flood of endorphins. Whereas hardcore is tightly structured, aggressive, heavy, and (often, at least) macho, XVâs music is feminine, loose, and airy, seeming to drift in and out of existence like some kind of wood nymph. On the Creekbeds on the Thrones picks up where the bandâs first album left off... like that record, it feels like a glimpse into someone elseâs consciousness. XV has called their music âfree punk,â and like free jazz it eschews the rigidity of structure that almost all other punk music takes as a given. Take a track like âTasmanian Angels,â which starts off as a ramshackle, Television Personalities-style twee punk tune, but over the course of its three minutes unravels into a vaguely Eastern-sounding jam that could be an outtake from one of the Velvet Undergroundâs first two albums or even one of Alice Coltraneâs early solo records. Throughout the album, XV floats between more ârockâ moments and passages that are freer (and usually quieter), but it feels less like changing gears and more like a natural process such as evaporation or freezing, happening so incrementally that you canât pinpoint when it moves from one mode to another. I can see someoneâespecially someone who doesnât feel like they need a counterpoint to the punk that dominates their soundtrackâfinding this aimless, or even finding stream-of-consciousness lyrics to songs like âPenâ and âFresh Lettuceâ too artless. For me, though, XVâs music transports me somewhere no other band can take me.













