The Convenience - Like Cartoon Vampires - New LP Record 2025 Winspear Black Vinyl - Indie Pop / Art Rock
The Convenience - Like Cartoon Vampires - New LP Record 2025 Winspear Black Vinyl - Indie Pop / Art Rock
On their second record as The Convenience, Like Cartoon Vampires, New Orleans multi-instrumentalists Nick Corson and Duncan Troast embrace a hypnotic physicality and collage-y, spur-of-the-moment approach to composition. The result is an avant-rock soundworld, peppered with spidery, atonal guitar work, pointy rhythms, and strident feedback, which may strike as a total reinvention following the sugary funk-pop of their 2021 debut album Accelerator. With their second LP, following their inspiration meant creating with their hands much more than buttons or switches. Sessions were characterized by gnarly, improvisational jams as they tinkered with everything from cassette loops, found sounds, and 808s. Tracks like āTarget Offerā and āFake the Feelingā quake with ear-splitting guitar feedback, while āPrayārā and āRatsā eschew their groove worship in favor of haunting minimalism. Song after song, Acceleratorās pop influences are traded in for more eccentric frontiers, with the clear common denominators of their first two records being the duoās spellbinding, funky instincts and a mastery of texture. Lyrically, Like Cartoon Vampires collects dispatches from a dying empireācharacters are devoured by alienation and vanity, though society doesnāt bat an eye. But make no mistake, these songs are not merely disaffected ennuiāmusic-making and collaboration are intensely emotional practices for The Convenience, and they reflect a shrieking lust for life.

Description
On their second record as The Convenience, Like Cartoon Vampires, New Orleans multi-instrumentalists Nick Corson and Duncan Troast embrace a hypnotic physicality and collage-y, spur-of-the-moment approach to composition. The result is an avant-rock soundworld, peppered with spidery, atonal guitar work, pointy rhythms, and strident feedback, which may strike as a total reinvention following the sugary funk-pop of their 2021 debut album Accelerator. With their second LP, following their inspiration meant creating with their hands much more than buttons or switches. Sessions were characterized by gnarly, improvisational jams as they tinkered with everything from cassette loops, found sounds, and 808s. Tracks like āTarget Offerā and āFake the Feelingā quake with ear-splitting guitar feedback, while āPrayārā and āRatsā eschew their groove worship in favor of haunting minimalism. Song after song, Acceleratorās pop influences are traded in for more eccentric frontiers, with the clear common denominators of their first two records being the duoās spellbinding, funky instincts and a mastery of texture. Lyrically, Like Cartoon Vampires collects dispatches from a dying empireācharacters are devoured by alienation and vanity, though society doesnāt bat an eye. But make no mistake, these songs are not merely disaffected ennuiāmusic-making and collaboration are intensely emotional practices for The Convenience, and they reflect a shrieking lust for life.













