event Gay Witch Abortion
Also Playing: Daughters Of The Sun and Buildings and Monica And The Molecules
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Sat Dec 5
9 pm
Gay Witch Abortion, Daughters Of The Sun, Buildings, and Monica And The Molecules at Turf Club
Psychedelic music flowers anew every few years, sprouting from the seeds that originally germinated in the '60s in the Bay Area, Woodstock, and Krautrock-friendly German cafes. Add a new bursting bud to this garden with Minneapolis combo Daughters Of The Sun. The casual groove of the band's Rings mostly follows the post-millennial school of sprawling, jam-oriented psych, but to its credit, shows that Daughters Of The Sun can also create more polished songs. The band seems to love nothing better than a sprawling soundscape, with several tracks clocking in at six minutes—and a ballsy and intriguing, if overlong, 15 minutes is given to the almost formless "Field Recordings: India '08." If indulgent, it's also a good indication of how Daughters' sound will continue to blossom.
Turf Club 1601 University Ave. W., Twin Cities, MN
Psychedelic music flowers anew every few years, sprouting from the seeds that originally germinated in the '60s in the Bay Area, Woodstock, and Krautrock-friendly German cafes. Add a new bursting bud to this garden with Minneapolis combo Daughters Of The Sun. The casual groove of the band's Rings mostly follows the post-millennial school of sprawling, jam-oriented psych, but to its credit, shows that Daughters Of The Sun can also create more polished songs. The band seems to love nothing better than a sprawling soundscape, with several tracks clocking in at six minutes—and a ballsy and intriguing, if overlong, 15 minutes is given to the almost formless "Field Recordings: India '08." If indulgent, it's also a good indication of how Daughters' sound will continue to blossom.
Updated 11/23/2009