×
Uh-oh, it looks like your Internet Explorer is out of date.
For a better shopping experience, please upgrade now.
0673855059426
$14.73
$15.99
Save 8%
Current price is $14.73, Original price is $15.99. You Save 8%.
View All Available Formats & Editions

CD
Members save with free shipping everyday!
See details
See details
14.73
In Stock
Overview
What started as a home-recorded solo project for Alabama native Katie Crutchfield, Waxahatchee moved to Philadelphia and gradually expanded in terms of sound and assertiveness, a trend continued on LP number four, Out in the Storm. Contributing factors to its more muscular disposition include the fact that it was recorded in a studio and was co-produced by John Agnello (Sonic Youth, Dinosaur Jr., Kurt Vile), who encouraged Crutchfield and her band to capture much of it live as a group. That band also happens to include her sister and Merge labelmate Allison Crutchfield, Sleater-Kinney touring guitarist Katie Harkin, former P.S. Eliot bandmate Katherine Simonetti on bass, and Pinkwash's Ashley Arnwine on drums. Last but not least, the album also finds Crutchfield reflecting on a breakup that's provided fodder for prior releases, but here she's looking at it in the rearview mirror. The tone is that of "good riddance," but not without having been through some stuff. It opens with the churning guitars, feedback, and meaty hooks of "Never Been Wrong," which regrets putting energy into the art of arguing with an expert manipulator. Later, on the fuzz-reinforced "No Question," she refers to "An invisible race/We'll be in it 'til one of us dies." "Brass Beam" has a wearier Crutchfield singing "I don't want to fight/I just want to sing my songs and sleep through the night." She slows things down on tracks like "Recite Remorse," where organ tones are accompanied by more ornamental, atmospheric guitar. The more intimate "A Little More" and "Fade" rely on acoustic guitar, so it's not all rowdy, but it is all raw. She doesn't code her stories here -- there are references to diving into the Coosa River and a car trip to Brooklyn. With Crutchfield as forthright as ever and collaborators suited to drive home her position, Out in the Storm hits with as much strength as emotion.
Product Details
Release Date: | 07/14/2017 |
---|---|
Label: | Merge Records |
UPC: | 0673855059426 |
catalogNumber: | 594 |
Rank: | 7455 |
Related Subjects
Customer Reviews
Related Searches
Explore More Items
Give these guys some credit for sticking with the program. For one, they're from Seattle ...
Give these guys some credit for sticking with the program. For one, they're from Seattle
-- okay, Tacoma. And they're very screamy and fast and indecipherable, sort of a slightly less impatient Alice In Chains with a very hip low ...
You really can't discuss Camera Obscura without mentioning Belle & Sebastian. That group's Stuart Murdoch ...
You really can't discuss Camera Obscura without mentioning Belle & Sebastian. That group's Stuart Murdoch
produces Camera Obscura's debut, Biggest Bluest Hi-Fi; both groups hail from the part of Scotland where Felt, Donovan, the Pastels, and Heavenly are gods; and ...
For 15 years, the name Ladybug Transistor on the front of an album has been ...
For 15 years, the name Ladybug Transistor on the front of an album has been
like a trademark of quality, and anyone buying one would be assured of wonderfully rich and emotional pop songs, intricately layered production, and a general ...
When she was singing and playing guitar in the Ettes, Coco Hames was a garage ...
When she was singing and playing guitar in the Ettes, Coco Hames was a garage
rock firebrand, able to melt plastic with her guitar and knock the birds out of the trees with her voice. On her self-titled solo debut, ...
No origin, no description. I can't tell you what the word means. It's like something
from Lost. So says Michael Benjamin Lerner, the bearded, bespectacled frontman (actually, he's the only member) of Telekinesis about the mysterious title of his fourth ...
Given Bob Mould's reputation for searing electric rock & roll, it may be easy to ...
Given Bob Mould's reputation for searing electric rock & roll, it may be easy to
think that the title of File Under: Easy Listening is ironic, and it is to a certain extent. But beneath the loud guitars lie the ...
Released a year after Mark Eitzel was nearly claimed by a heart attack, 2012's Don't ...
Released a year after Mark Eitzel was nearly claimed by a heart attack, 2012's Don't
Be a Stranger was an impressive album that was his strongest bit of record making in years. But the album sometimes suggested Eitzel was pacing ...
After releasing a well-received EP in 2008, Brooklyn indie pop trio Hospitality seemingly went into ...
After releasing a well-received EP in 2008, Brooklyn indie pop trio Hospitality seemingly went into
hiding, not letting even a single track escape. Finally, in early 2012, they resurfaced with a full-length, self-titled album for Merge that expands on the ...