The Weather Station - Ignorance - New LP Record 2021 Fat Possum Baby Blue Vinyl - Indie Rock / Folk Rock
The Weather Station - Ignorance - New LP Record 2021 Fat Possum Baby Blue Vinyl - Indie Rock / Folk Rock
The Weather Station - Ignorance
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Format: LP
Cat No: FP1746-5
Barcode: 767981174655
Released: 16 July 2021
Ignorance (Baby Blue Vinyl)
Once again, Toronto songwriter Tamara Lindeman has remade what The Weather Station sounds like; once again, she has used the occasion of a new record to create a new sonic landscape, tailor-made to express an emotional idea. Ignorance, Lindeman’s debut for Mississippi label Fat Possum Records, is sensuous, ravishing, as hi fi a record as Lindeman has ever made, breaking into pure pop at moments, at others a dense wilderness of notes; a deeply rhythmic, deeply painful record that feels more urgent, more clear than her work ever has.
The title of the album, Ignorance, feels confrontational, calling to mind perhaps wilful ignorance, but Lindeman insists she meant it in a different context. In 1915 Virginia Woolfe wrote: “the future is dark, which is the best thing a future can be, I think.” Written amidst the brutal first world war, the darkness of the future connoted for Woolfe a not knowing, which by definition holds a sliver of hope; the possibility for something, somewhere, to change.
TRACKLISTINGS
SIDE A
1. Robber
2. Atlantic
3. Tried To Tell You
4. Parking Lot
5. Loss
SIDE B
1. Separated
2. Wear
3. Trust
4. Heart
5. Subdivisions
Original: $24.99
-65%$24.99
$8.75
Description
The Weather Station - Ignorance
Â
Format: LP
Cat No: FP1746-5
Barcode: 767981174655
Released: 16 July 2021
Ignorance (Baby Blue Vinyl)
Once again, Toronto songwriter Tamara Lindeman has remade what The Weather Station sounds like; once again, she has used the occasion of a new record to create a new sonic landscape, tailor-made to express an emotional idea. Ignorance, Lindeman’s debut for Mississippi label Fat Possum Records, is sensuous, ravishing, as hi fi a record as Lindeman has ever made, breaking into pure pop at moments, at others a dense wilderness of notes; a deeply rhythmic, deeply painful record that feels more urgent, more clear than her work ever has.
The title of the album, Ignorance, feels confrontational, calling to mind perhaps wilful ignorance, but Lindeman insists she meant it in a different context. In 1915 Virginia Woolfe wrote: “the future is dark, which is the best thing a future can be, I think.” Written amidst the brutal first world war, the darkness of the future connoted for Woolfe a not knowing, which by definition holds a sliver of hope; the possibility for something, somewhere, to change.
TRACKLISTINGS
SIDE A
1. Robber
2. Atlantic
3. Tried To Tell You
4. Parking Lot
5. Loss
SIDE B
1. Separated
2. Wear
3. Trust
4. Heart
5. Subdivisions













