Adding in new sonic elements like Afro-pop grooves, West Coast sunshine pop harmonies, and introspective singer/songwriter feels, this is March's masterpiece.
On their fourth album, the band successfully layer acoustic instruments (piano, woodwinds, strings) into their peacefully melancholy electronic pop sound.
Using little more than the sequencer of his vintage Roland SH-101 synth, the Montreal native builds a warm little house around his musings on aging, friendships, matters of the heart.
Lou Barlow’s album of breakup anthems hit incredibly hard as a teenager, and to an extent even more so as a middle-aged man. Bakesale may have evolved from the scrappy lo-fi recordings of the band’s earlier albums, but make no mistake that these tracks are still as raw and emotional as Sebadoh has ever been.