
If you listen to Man of Aran and think it sounds like a soundtrack . . . You're right. The album is built to accompany a 1934 film that you've probably never seen . . . And probably never will. British Sea Power has continued their Herculean efforts to be as obscure as humanly possible with their latest effort, which features several 10+ minute extended (jams?) that, at times, sound like ocean noise and whale sounds. I remember a long time ago reading a pretty positive review of a British Sea Power record that asked the [...]