It’s uncanny what industrial quantities of drug will do for a man, depending on where and when he’s you do the imbibing. On the one hand, Gruff Rhys’ partnership with Brazilian VCR repairman and peacenik Tony Da Gatorra functions as a accidentally makeshift jubilee of the unifying energy of drug and prevalent eccentricity. On the other, it’s some-more similar to the retreat of that; an existentially challenged square that competence easily’ve been subtitled Drugs And Their Proper Sociological Context.

Not meaningful the specifics of possibly artist’s piece money coming in for sure, you’ll have to forgive the reckless on this one. But you can suppose how, for an artist scholastic in the post-flower power, post-ideological West, a years-long slant for psychoactives competence shepherd the idealist instinct in to the arrange of often ironic, musically schizophrenic zones Gruff Rhys charts in his outlay with Super Furry Animals. But for Tony Da Gatorra, an ageing hippy alien proprietor in Sao Paulo, insubordinate fervour is a still-living mental recall that shapes and gives force to his agit-surrealist MO. He’s similar to Alan Vega crossed with Che Guevara, usually most improved at revelation you what’s up with your knackered DVD player.

All of that creates him undiluted favourite element for a bleary-eyed pscychonaut similar to Rhys, and in truth the Furry frontman sought Da Gatorra out in his South American home for the creation of this album, a rickety savage mostly sensitive by the tragedy in between the pair’s aforementioned unusual styles. Recorded in 5 hours and churned in 12, it’s a million miles from the discriminating chrome surfaces of Rhys’ Boom Bip collab, Neon Neon. And yet, any one awaiting a lo-fi cocktail recording in the demeanour of SFA’s Mwng or Dark Days/Light Years is going to come divided from The Terror of Cosmic Loneliness nursing a really bruise conduct indeed.

Only In a House with No Mirrors and Oh! Warra Hoo! retain something of Rhys’s unreasoning unreal melodicism, the former an edgy, neurotic cut of scarcely focused garage pop, the latter’s honeyed outspoken strapped to the electrified gusto of open guitar strings that powers the jot down similar to so most space station fuel. Much some-more in impression have been O Que Tu Tem, that sounds similar to Silver Apples soundtracking a B movie about lawnmowers left bad, and Eu Protesto, that takes us in to the arrange of screamingly whacked-out domain noted out by Alejandro Jodorowsky’s cult dissenter movie El Topo.

Whether you’ll see it as such might rely on your eagerness to welcome lines such as “in a room full of turtles you stood on a toad / you saw your thoughtfulness in the muck on the back”, and certainly, the jot down additionally shares Jodorowsky’s annoying indulgences and implicit air of self-parody, final coaxed out rsther than expertly by The Mighty Boosh. But from a sure standpoint, that’s idealist bent for you in a nutshell: in apocalyptic need of an editor.

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