The Berlin-via-Baltimore band folds processed choral fragments into their intricate instrumental lattice, a small shift that alters the whole.
The first sounds on Horse Lords’ new album aren’t the familiar intertwining guitars and locked-in rhythms. They belong to Nina Guo and Evelyn Saylor, whose brief, Auto-Tuned interpretation of a 19th-century harp piece floats in like a displaced transmission. It’s a first for the long-running instrumental band, but the real surprise is how quickly those voices disintegrate into grist for the groove in “Brain of the Firm.”
For over a decade, Horse Lords have built a sound from clashing materials—no wave, krautrock, minimalist patterns, microtonal scales—and held them in equilibrium through sheer rhythmic force. On Demand to Be Taken to Heaven Alive!, voices arrive less as a lead instrument than as another texture to be absorbed. Sampled, processed, and woven into the band’s evolving patterns, they add a fleeting human grain without ever centralizing a single presence.
The record was assembled across two cities, with members tracking separately in Berlin and Baltimore. The cohesion, though, suggests a shared wavelength honed through years of playing together. It’s there in the playful robot-funk of “First Galactic Utopia” and the tense drones of “Before the Law,” where an acoustic intro gives way to call-and-response no-wave propulsion. The album never resolves into a suite, but it moves with a logic that feels less composed than uncovered.
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