March 11th, 2022 3:11am
Overhead In Heaven
Goose “Dripfield”
Goose are a jam band in both practice and cultural context but “Dripfield,” the title track of their forthcoming third record, doesn’t really sound like anything you’d reasonably expect from that world regardless of whether you have positive or negative associations with it. “Dripfield” sounds more like the work of a band rooted a general post-Radiohead lane of alt-rock, a song that would sit comfortably alongside the likes of Sigur Ros, My Morning Jacket, TV on the Radio, Muse, or Coldplay at their most adventurous. If you told me this was produced by Brian Eno, I’d believe it – it certainly has the feel of when he applies his aesthetic vision to striving, searching, epic rock music. If you’re looking for the jam band elements you can find them, mostly towards the end of the song when the tension breaks and a bright guitar solo feels like it absolutely could head off into a more improvisational direction but instead settles into a gently decelerating outro. I’m very curious to see where Goose go with this – if they keep moving into this type of rock while maintaining the philosophies and concert structures of jam band music they would be exploring very new musical territory. Like, I don’t think anyone was ever wondering what it’d be like if U2 and Phish could somehow be the same band, but this is making a good case for what that might be like.
Buy it from Bandcamp.
3/16/22 3:37 pm
Scott Bateman says:This is better than I thought it was going to be, I really dig it.