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Bailter Space – Strobosphere Discount Low Shipping Fee

Original price was: $8.12.Current price is: $4.00.

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Description

Bailterspace are one of New Zealand’s most influential indie rock bands. Sonically intense, yet still possessing a keen sense of melody, Bailterspace play loud, noise-inflected rock; huge sheets of distorted guitar intertwined with pulsing rhythms.

After a slew of critically-acclaimed albums throughout the ’90s, Bailterspace disappeared off the radar after 1998’s Solar.3. A retrospective compilation appeared in 2004, frontman Alister Parker played a number of solo shows — largely drawing upon the Bailterspace discography — and a reconfigured line-up took the stage at New York’s Bowery Ballroom in 2008, minus long-time bass player John Halvorsen.

And now, some four years after that appearance, here we have Strobosphere, the band’s first new material in over 15 years. The New York-shot promo photos show just Parker and McLachlan, indicating that Halvorsen is now out of the equation. New material from bands who have left such an inspiring legacy is always a dicey proposition. The ultimate question is, how does Strobosphere stack up to such classics as Vortura and Robot World?

And the answer is… pretty bloody well. From the outset, Strobosphere picks up seamlessly where they left off all those years ago. It sounds not so much like a band rediscovering who they once were, but more like a band whose sonic identity is so ingrained in their psyche that a lengthy hiatus could be a mere couple weeks between gigs.

There’s nothing as dreamy as 1997’s ‘Argonaut’ here, but hearing the band sound so reinvigorated on tracks like ‘Island’ and ‘Op1′ makes up for the slight lack of navergence across the album. With a riff recalling 1988’s ‘The Today Song’, ‘World We Share’ closes the album by invoking the same kind of laconic feeling that has been so characteristic of the band’s output.

The elements are all there as they were 25-odd years ago — sure, the band may be older, but the music remains ageless. Considering the number of bands currently mining the shoegaze genre for inspiration, as well as My Bloody Valentine’s wholly unexpected return to the live forum, the stage is set for Bailterspace to return and reap what they truly deserve as simply one of the great bands of the past thirty years. Welcome back.

Tracklist:
1 Things That We Found
2 Strobosphere
3 Blue Star
4 Polarize
5 No Sense
6 Meeting Place
7 Island
8 Op1
9 Live By The Ocean
10 Dset
11 World We Share