
Lorelle Meets The Obsolete - De Facto
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Mexican duo Lorelle Meets The Obsolete released their new album De Facto on January 11, 2019.
The album, their fifth, was recorded at their home studio in Ensenada, Baja California, mixed by Cooper Crain (of Cave and Bitchin Bajas) and mastered by Mikey Young (of Eddy Current Suppression Ring and Total Control). Itâs easily their best and most coherent album to date, and also the one that fully explores the outer limits of their sound.
âThere was a conscious desire to push further with what we were doing,â says The Obsolete, aka Alberto GonzĂĄlez. âOne of our rules for this album was to go all in without middle grounds in terms of what we wanted the songs to be. We were committed to developing ideas that made our heads go âPOW!â from the beginning.â
The end result is somewhere between the brave experimentation of the new Low album, Double Negative, and Tender Buttons-era Broadcast put through a heavy psych filter. There are pure pop songs that come across like lost â60s nuggets (âLinĂ©as En Hojasâ), blistering white noise jams (âUnificadoâ) and meditative incantations (âLa Magaâ) â all of which will, indeed, make heads go âPOW!â.
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Â
Mexican duo Lorelle Meets The Obsolete released their new album De Facto on January 11, 2019.
The album, their fifth, was recorded at their home studio in Ensenada, Baja California, mixed by Cooper Crain (of Cave and Bitchin Bajas) and mastered by Mikey Young (of Eddy Current Suppression Ring and Total Control). Itâs easily their best and most coherent album to date, and also the one that fully explores the outer limits of their sound.
âThere was a conscious desire to push further with what we were doing,â says The Obsolete, aka Alberto GonzĂĄlez. âOne of our rules for this album was to go all in without middle grounds in terms of what we wanted the songs to be. We were committed to developing ideas that made our heads go âPOW!â from the beginning.â
The end result is somewhere between the brave experimentation of the new Low album, Double Negative, and Tender Buttons-era Broadcast put through a heavy psych filter. There are pure pop songs that come across like lost â60s nuggets (âLinĂ©as En Hojasâ), blistering white noise jams (âUnificadoâ) and meditative incantations (âLa Magaâ) â all of which will, indeed, make heads go âPOW!â.















