Geiger Counter (album)
Geiger Counter is the debut album of Liar, Flower, a musical project formed by English singer-songwriter KatieJane Garside and American guitarist Chris Whittingham, who have also released material as the duo Ruby Throat.[5] Its title refers to a Geiger counter, an instrument used to detect ionizing radiation. The album was released in April 2020 by One Little Indian Records.
Geiger Counter | |
---|---|
Digital release artwork | |
Studio album by Liar, Flower | |
Released | 20 April 2020[1] |
Recorded | 2019 |
Genre | |
Length | 48:57 |
Label | One Little Indian |
Recording
Garside and her partner Chris Whittingham recorded the album after an extensive sailing excursion spanning the Galápagos and Marquesas Islands, New Zealand, Australia, Mauritius, South Africa, and the Azores.[6] According to Garside, "We recorded a lot of this through improvisation. Chris would come up with a drum loop and a riff. We would just play against the drum loop and record for an hour or hour-and-a-half... Then Chris did a little bit of chopping around. There were a couple of little fixes, but it was all there. I take a sense of happiness from that because there's always the raw real that comes out in the initial writing. That's so hard to recapture when you've known the song, and you've rehearsed it a hundred times, and you're taking it into the studio for the fifth time."[2]
Promotion and release
The album was released by One Little Indian Records on 20 April 2020, as a double vinyl/CD combination pack with additional handmade artwork including two signed framable prints, a pressed flower in glassine, and a comic art book, limited to 500 sets.[1] On 1 May 2020, the album was made available for digital download and streaming on various platforms.[1] On 28 April 2020, it was included in a playlist for All Songs Considered by Bob Boilen on NPR.[7]
Critical reception
Brett Callwood of LA Weekly named it the album of the week on 12 May 2020, writing: "These 12 songs are a full journey. Wistful, delicate thoughtfulness gives way to pain, and then turns full circle again. You hear elements of Kate Bush, then Portishead then Björk. It’s like we’ve been allowed in Garside’s head for a good rummage through her psyche for a while."[8] Jedd Beaudoin of PopMatters praised the album, writing that it "sounds unlike any other record you'll hear this year. Though even veteran artists offer occasional clues to their influences, crumbs of what lies at the center of their musical DNA, this is something that seems to have appeared virtually from nowhere, unaffected by contemporary sounds or concerns and yet entirely of them."[2]
Chris Ball of the music review site Echoes and Dust called the album " a work of revelation, purge and covenant... You may find it’s the noisy tracks that reel you in at first but the quality of the folkier numbers won’t take long to become apparent."[9] The independent entertainment website Total Ntertainment described the album as "Stylistically varied, [ranging] from raw, bewildering, venomous rock to gentle folk musings."[3] The Scotsman's Fiona Shepard wrote: "With characteristic disregard for the zeitgeist, Garside and her guitarist partner Chris Whittingham emerge from long-term self-imposed isolation on their sailboat home just as the rest of the world reckons with [COVID-19 pandemic] lockdown. But Geiger Counter suggests little has changed in Garside’s unhinged musical world. She is a woman of many voices from childlike gurgle to feral screech, which she unleashes on grungey tantrums and unsettling lullabies played on autoharp, with a diversion into the gothic vaudeville."[10]
Track listing
All tracks are written by KatieJane Garside and Chris Whittingham, except where noted.
No. | Title | Writer(s) | Length |
---|---|---|---|
1. | "I Am Sundress (She Of Infinite Flowers)" | KatieJane Garside | 5:18 |
2. | "My Brain Is Lit Like An Airport" | 4:29 | |
3. | "9N - AFE" | 4:03 | |
4. | "Mud Stars" | 4:26 | |
5. | "Broken Light" | Garside | 3:02 |
6. | "Even Though The Darkest Clouds" | 3:00 | |
7. | "Blood Berries" | 4:01 | |
8. | "Little Brown Shoe" | 3:48 | |
9. | "Baby Teeth" | 4:33 | |
10. | "Hole In My Hand" | 5:05 | |
11. | "Geiger Counter" | Garside | 4:35 |
12. | "Doors Locked, Oven's Off" | Chris Whittingham | 2:04 |
Total length: | 48:57 |
No. | Title | Writer(s) | Length |
---|---|---|---|
13. | "White Paint On Field" | 5:53 | |
14. | "Fire At Bone Girl Hotel" |
| 4:52 |
Personnel
- KatieJane Garside – vocals, autoharp, production
- Chris Whittingham – guitar, drums, percussion, production
References
- Garside, KatieJane (20 April 2020). "katiejane garside liar, flower 'geiger counter' new album". KatieJane Garside Official Site. Archived from the original on 4 June 2020.
- Beaudoin, Jedd (28 April 2020). "Liar, Flower's Eclectic, Electric 'Geiger Counter' Arrives (album stream + premiere)". PopMatters. Archived from the original on 4 June 2020.
- Total Ntertainment Staff (2 May 2020). "Liar, Flower announce new album: Geiger Counter". Total Ntertainment. Archived from the original on 4 June 2020.
- Rondeau, Michel (2020). "Liar, Flower: Geiger Counter". PanM360 (in French). Montreal, Quebec: Multimédias M 360. Archived from the original on 4 June 2020. Retrieved 4 June 2020.
- "Song Premiere: "Geiger Counter" by Liar, Flower". News Break. 29 April 2020. Archived from the original on 4 June 2020.
- Lanham, Tom (28 May 2020). "Katie Jane Garside on Why She Took a Break From Sailing Around the World by Boat to Record a New Album". Spin. Archived from the original on 6 June 2020. Retrieved 6 June 2020.
- Boilen, Bob (28 April 2020). "New Mix: Khruangbin, Lucinda Williams, Protomartyr, More". All Songs Considered. NPR. Archived from the original on 4 June 2020.
- Callwood, Brett (12 May 2020). "Album of the Week: Liar, Flower's Geiger Counter". LA Weekly. Archived from the original on 4 June 2020.
- Ball, Chris (20 May 2020). "Review: Liar, Flower – Geiger Counter". Echoes and Dust. Archived from the original on 4 June 2020.
- Shepherd, Fiona (2 May 2020). "Album reviews: Wendy James; Liar, Flower; Lavinia Blackwall; Findlay Napier". The Scotsman. Archived from the original on 4 June 2020.