Critic's Notebook

Wilderness

For a band based in Baltimore, Wilderness sure is in touch with its British side. The band's just-released Vessel States and self-titled debut -- which garnered the quartet considerable acclaim from Pitchfork and its readers last year -- draw as heavily from the other side of the pond as they...
Carbonatix Pre-Player Loader

Audio By Carbonatix

For a band based in Baltimore, Wilderness sure is in touch with its British side. The band’s just-released Vessel States and self-titled debut — which garnered the quartet considerable acclaim from Pitchfork and its readers last year — draw as heavily from the other side of the pond as they do on the flanged textures of Deconstruction, a one-off, mid-’90s project involving members of Jane’s Addiction. Singer James Johnson favors a porridge-thick, exaggerated-syllable bellow that suggests John Lydon is a major influence of his, while the rest of the band — bassist Brian Gossman, guitarist Colin McCann, and drummer Will Goode — sinks its honed, glistening teeth into compelling if repetitive post-Joy Division rock workouts. There’s a bit of the Talking Heads’ stark extra-otherness, Mark E. Smith’s righteous indignation, and Sonic Youth’s pacing shimmer thrown in for good measure, and to powerful effect: True to its name, Wilderness aptly evokes a sense of being blissfully lost in the familiar.

GET MORE COVERAGE LIKE THIS

Sign up for the Music newsletter to get the latest stories delivered to your inbox

Loading latest posts...