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Comes on green vinyl LP.
The genre-eliding New Jersey artist makes songs that froth and fizz and occasionally freak outย Michael Gordon isnโt one for subtlety. The songs that the New Jersey artist makes as Mk.gee froth and fizz and occasionally freak out, making their unwieldy production not just noticeable, but an integral part of the songwriting. Take โNew Low,โ the brisk two-minute opener to his exceptional debut album Two Star & The Dream Police: its percussion has the lightness and congeniality of a schoolyard hand-clapping game, but itโs set atop a wobbling synth bass that underlines his contemplative lyrics. He sounds both resentful and filled with pity, pointing out a friendโs woeful fraudulence. Still, the songโs metallic clangs are more acerbic than anything he could sing, and he knows itโhe doesnโt utter a word during the final 30 seconds.
Gordonโs works havenโt always been this robust. His 2020 mixtape, A Museum of Contradiction, was rife with straightforward R&B and bedroom psychedelia, sounding like watered-down Tame Impala and Thundercat befitting โChill Vibesโ playlists; the lo-fi aesthetic was often the entire point. The leap from that record to Two Star is massive; where a song like โDimebackโ felt like dream pop backwash, the 12 tracks here draw endless comparisons. In โRylee & Iโ alone he evokes the mangled production of Bon Iverโs 22, A Million; the gauzy seduction of Jai Paulโs demos; the attention to space in Arthur Russellโs World of Echo; and the everyman sensitivity of John Mayer.
That Mk.gee can bring to mind such varied artists is a testament to his ingenuity. โI Wantโ is a moody sophisti-pop track in the lineage of the Blue Nile, with a driving beat and haunted vocal harmonies that carry a persistent anxiety. He frets about the unspoken tensions between him and a lover, and he longs to close the gap between his desires and reality. His fantasy comes to life, if briefly, in the form of a flashy guitar solo; itโs the albumโs most pointedly jarring moment. Thereโs also some showboating on โCandy,โ and it too has narrative importance: Gordon shreds like heโs got a massive grin on his face, as if this is a private moment of goofy, endearing affection for someone he loves.
This unabashed craving for intimacy is at the heart of Two Starโs best songs. โLittle Bit Moreโ has muted guitar playing thatโs offset by the raw sound of piano chords and the briefest, sparest string arrangement. This confluence of the muddy and clear echoes the gradual softening of his heart. โI dream of nothing like I used to before/Since you opened the door,โ he sings. Itโs a tender lyric, and before long the song is over.
The brevity of Gordonโs music is welcome because Two Star is an album about reflection. He suffers heartbreak on โDream Policeโ and reminisces about an ex on โBreakthespell.โ He argues with a lover on โAlesisโ and bickers throughout โDNM.โ Listening to these tracks feels like paging through an old diary and coming to terms with how much youโve grown. Never is this more clear than on album highlight โHow many miles,โ a song about feeling lost and finding yourself. He sings the titular line in the chorus, but the second time it comes around he lets the instrumentation run without much accompaniment. In his decision not to sing, he offers a reminder: itโs only through such distressing rumination that we understand what needs to change. Two Star is an album about sadness and frustration and loss, but it is also, in the same way, about knowing what you want: love, joy, contentment (source is rollingstone.com).
Weight | 1 lbs |
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Dimensions | 14 × 14 × 1 in |
Condition | New |
Vinyl Color | Green |
Media | Vinyl |