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Alarm Magazine Names Their Top 50 Albums

Adebisi Shank: This is the Second Album from a Band Called Adebisi Shank (Sargent House, 3/15/11)
Released to European acclaim in 2010, the aptly titled second album from Irish electro/math rockers Adebisi Shank achieved North American release this year thanks to the peerless Sargent House.
The management company / record label describes the trio as a blend of Fang Island’s shredding riffs with Battles’ electronic quirkiness and rhythmic playfulness. That description isn’t off the mark, but readers won’t get a sense of the band’s real abilities until they hear its hyper-melodic, polyrhythmic, and — most importantly — jubilant songs in full.
Second Album delivers a maelstrom of zany electronics, unusual distortions, and triumphant, rapidly ascending scales mixed with vintage synths, marimba, horns, and other accoutrements. This is all packaged between and around gloriously catchy and powerful rock riffs, resulting in a manic and buoyant sophomore effort.
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Alarm Magazine Previews Micromachines


Adebisi Shank: This Is The Second Album Of A Band Called Adebisi Shank (Sargent House, 3/15/11)
Adebisi Shank: “Micromachines”
Irish trio Adebisi Shank, already causing a stir in Europe with its wicked-precise guitar harmonizing and boundless energy, will release its new album, titled simply This Is The Second Album Of A Band Called Adebisi Shank, in North America on March 15 via Sargent House.
Its music isn’t easily categorized, but falls somewhere in the realm of a math-metal version of Battles. The fluctuations in tempo, volume, and overall intensity make each song a progressive exploration of texture and melody. Due in part to a sheer glut of instruments, one minute you’re listening to vicious shredding, and the next a blissed-out Peter Gabriel- /Animal Collective-style groove.
“On the first album, our mission was get in, tear it up, get out,” says Vin, the band’s bassist. “The whole thing is over in about 24 minutes, which is really cool, but this time we wanted to make something that you could really spend a bit of time with, get a bit lost in. This one’s 40 minutes, which might not sound a lot, but to us that is almost like a double album. It’s a big, glorious mess.”
The band is set to make its live debut in the US during the Sargent House showcase at SXSW
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