REVIEW: 'Datura' Boston Manor
- milnercimone
- Oct 13, 2022
- 3 min read
Updated: Nov 14, 2022
The five-piece band Boston Manor- vocalist Henry Cox, lead guitarist Mike Cunniff, rhythm guitarist Ash Wilson, bassist Dan Cunniff and drummer Jordan Pugh- have started to thematically create a name for themselves in the most recent years through albums and EPs. Their 2018 album titled ‘Welcome To The Neighborhood’ set the listener in a fictional state of the band's hometown, Blackpool in Lancashire, England. Their 2020 album ‘GLUE’ shows a broken and chaotic world, but it was filtered through Cox’s eyes. Their most previous work ‘Desperate Times, Desperate Pleasures’ introduced a sound and feeling of something churning and unsettling. Their newest set of songs place you in between the faint light of dusk and dawn, giving off the feeling of something more sinister lurking in the shadows. Boston Manor’s newest seven track, full-length album Datura expands on their previous sound and begins to create a new thematic concept that we have not seen from them before.
Immediately opening the album you are met with ' ‘Datura(dusk)’ ' that has a consecutive sense of eeriness, which seems to engulf you and bring you in for the ride. The raspy vocals and heavy bass reinforce the feeling of something lurking behind. Smoothly transitioning into ‘Floodlights on the square’ you shift to a more upbeat and intense track. Although the overall beat and sound presents itself as happy and uplifting, the darkness and uncanny feeling is still felt once the track is over.
The darkness seems to lift with the next track ‘Foxlove’ , but you’d be mistaken! ‘Foxlove’ gives a more cyber and crunchy feel, but it shows how darkness can follow you and be around even though things seem ok. Following ‘Foxlove’ the next track ‘Passenger’ hits you with a punch of intense, uninhibited hopefulness to bring you out of the darkness, but at the expense of what may be an emotional relapse back into the darkness. It explains how the darkness is bigger than them and they are just the “passenger driving alone”. Flowing into ‘Crocus’ it gives a similar feeling to the previous track- the feeling of hope, but then the inevitable downfall. ‘Shelter from the rain’ is a complete instrumental track with small segments of voices that transitions the album into the light or the faint light you see at dawn. This track gives pure bliss to the listener, but it does seem like a different approach that we have not seen from the band. Having this track plays an important role because it seamlessly flows into the next track ‘Inertia’. Out of all the tracks on the album this one comes off as the most confusing. You are given soft synthetic sounds accompanied by the raw and impassioned vocals. It seems to be a very emotional song, but you do not know if you made it out of the darkness, because there is a hidden track at the end of it. Right as you think the song has ended a chaotic sound of supernatural beings begin to gradually take over the sound, but then it completely stops and you are left with the birds at dawn. Did they make it out of the darkness or is the cycle just restarting?
Overall Boston Manor’s newest album Datura was very well written and put together. The metaphorical background gives the album the ability to be enjoyed an listened to all the way through or just track by track.
Verdict: 5/5
Make sure to stream their newest album 'Datura' on October 14th.
Check them out on social media!
Instagram- @bstnmnr
Spotify- Boston Manor
written for square one magazine- https://www.squareonemagazine.co.uk/reviews/boston-manor-datura
コメント