
Post-rock's future is now.
Clair De Lune - Assisted Living
[3.5/5] There's a palpable sense of frustration running through Clair De Lune's Assisted Living-whether it's with pill-popping wasters ("She drowns in suicidal sanctuary/Think she'll bleed it out?"), social alienation ("Guide me by manipulation/Black heart charades") or excessive consumerism ("Your greedy luxuries are a cancer in your gut/The sores in your heart"). But while most of these outbursts never lead to satisfactory answers or solutions, the tension inherent within the Minneapolis quintet's music makes Living incredibly dynamic-and completely uncategorizable. Think a more nuanced At The Drive-In crossed with the moody atmospherics of Cursive, all thrown together with post-punk spikes, solid hardcore breakdowns and startlingly beautiful orchestral moments (the string-laced instrumental "Winning Over Grief And Sorrow" and the piano-distressed "Shadow Companion," only available digitially). (DEEP ELM) Annie Zaleski
Official Website: http://www.deepelm.com
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Also in this issue:
- Good Charlotte
- The Queers
- Bayside
- The Boils
- Ted Leo And The Pharmicists
- Nothington
- Big D And The Kids Table
- Relient K
- Signal To Noise
- Sounds Like Violence
- Explosions In The Sky
- Aereogramme
- Air
- Arcade Fire
- Aqualung
- Between The Trees
- Daphne Loves Derby
- The Nein
- Seafood
- Maria Taylor
- Comeback Kid
- Alabama Thunderpussy
- Autonym
- Big Business
- Daggermouth
- The End
- The Handshake Murders
- Life In Your Way
- Otep
- Since The Flood
- xDEATHSTARx
- Lovedrug
- Jesse Malin
- The Agency
- Call Me Lightning
- The Higher
- Kaddisfly
- Kingfield
- RTX
- Son Volt
- Southern Culture On The Skids
- The Stooges
- RJD2
- !!!
- Daníel Ágúst
- Dälek
- Brother Ali
- LCD Soundsystem
- Skinny Puppy
- Other sections...





























[3.5/5] There's a palpable sense of frustration running through Clair De Lune's Assisted Living-whether it's with pill-popping wasters ("She drowns in suicidal sanctuary/Think she'll bleed it out?"), social alienation ("Guide me by manipulation/Black heart charades") or excessive consumerism ("Your greedy luxuries are a cancer in your gut/The sores in your heart"). But while most of these outbursts never lead to satisfactory answers or solutions, the tension inherent within the Minneapolis quintet's music makes Living incredibly dynamic-and completely uncategorizable. Think a more nuanced At The Drive-In crossed with the moody atmospherics of Cursive, all thrown together with post-punk spikes, solid hardcore breakdowns and startlingly beautiful orchestral moments (the string-laced instrumental "Winning Over Grief And Sorrow" and the piano-distressed "Shadow Companion," only available digitially). (DEEP ELM) Annie Zaleski
Official Website: 
