
I really have no idea how to describe Black Dice, or this album to be honest. The Brooklyn based trio are signed to Animal Collective's Paw Tracks record label, and on paper, fit the same "experimental" label as the men that head their label. But somewhere along the road, that label got overshadowed by something weirder, crazier, and at some times far more silly. It seems as though every song on this album starts out with an idea, and then all hell breaks loose. Each song has a general foundation, but after the foundation is laid, not even the band [...]