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Blindfold

I only had to read a few of the song titles from Icelandicsinger-songwriter Blindfold to know I was in for music that would putme to sleep.


Resonant


Titles like “Sleepless Nights,” “Daze,” and “Nightfall”were dead giveaways to songs that would feature slow moving tempos,ambient electronic structure, and echoed guitar, all swirling into ahazy paste of long winters and short days. After a period of time withBlindfold, I can say my original assessment wasn’t far off. I’velistened to Blindfold’s eponymous debut at least six times in two days,each time remembering less and less of what I’ve heard. And that’s thebasic problem plaguing Blindfold here - nothing stands out. A typicaltrack here will start out with an ambient sound-scape, followed by somemelodic figure played through an echo pedal. On a few of the songs,there are vocals, which makes things slightly more interesting. “Daze”features a genuinely interesting guitar riff, plodding drums, and thelow, nearly mumbled vocals of Birgir Hilmarsson. Blindfold seems tomake the mistake of placing to much emphasis on texture rather thendynamics. While texture is good, it makes for pretty unremarkablesound-scapes here. There aren’t many flat out bad moments on Blindfold,but at the same time it remains a fairly unremarkable experience. Ihope that in the future, Hilmarsson can take the rough ideas sketchedhere and perhaps apply them to a larger, more encompassing canvas.Until then he seems content to just steal a few ideas from hispost-rock heroes and gently lull me to sleep.

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