Disappears / Guider
Artist Disappears
Album Title: Guider
Album Cover:
Primary Genre Rock
Format CD
Released 01/17/2011
Label Kranky
Catalog No KRANK 151
Bar Code No 7 96441 81512 8
Packaging Cardboard
Tracks
1. Superstition (1:51)
2. Not Romantic (3:16)
3. Halo (3:54)
4. Guider (3:12)
5. New Fast (2:47)
6. Revisiting (15:57)
Date Acquired 10/24/2013
Personal Rating
Acquired from Kranky.Net
Purchase Price 14.00

Web Links

All Music Guide Entry:
Discogs Entry:

Notes

foobar2000 1.2.9 / Dynamic Range Meter 1.1.1
log date: 2013-10-27 23:04:00

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Analyzed: Disappears / Guider
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DR         Peak         RMS     Duration Track
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DR6       -0.21 dB    -8.25 dB      1:52 01-Superstition
DR7       -0.18 dB    -8.91 dB      3:16 02-Not Romantic
DR7       -0.10 dB    -8.48 dB      3:54 03-Halo
DR6       -0.13 dB    -7.95 dB      3:13 04-Guider
DR7       -0.23 dB    -9.55 dB      2:47 05-New Fast
DR7       -0.16 dB    -9.09 dB     15:58 06-Revisiting
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Number of tracks:  6
Official DR value: DR7

Samplerate:        44100 Hz
Channels:          2
Bits per sample:   16
Bitrate:           850 kbps
Codec:             FLAC
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Reviews
All Music Guide Review:

Review by Heather Phares

Disappears had their debut album, Lux, under their belts for a while before Kranky released it in early 2010. Even so, the jump the band makes on Guider, released less than a year later, is significant. The title track blasts out of the gate, revealing a nimbler version of the fiery, droning rock the band introduced on Lux. Before, they sounded like they could pummel a song into the ground, but here it feels like Disappears shoot their music into the sky. “Not Romantic” flirts with surf before revving guitars and formidable drums come together with wind-tunnel force, while “New Fast”'s nasty fuzz bass gives the song more heft without weighing it down. A psychedelic sheen makes these songs far sleeker than Lux, but Disappears sound just as muscular on Guider, if not more so. The band digs into a Krautrock-tinged lock groove on “Halo” and the 16-minute epic “Revisiting,” managing to make it sound vital and present instead of receding into a hypnotic haze. The brief parting shot “Superstition” reaffirms that Disappears grew even more powerful between this album and Lux. Concise yet ambitious, Guider finds Disappears firing on all cylinders and going far beyond Lux's promise.

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