Artist:
Matthew Dear

Black City (Ghostly 25 Year Anniversary Edition): Limited Edition): Transparent Silver Vinyl LP

£26.99

Release Date: 22 November, 2024

Limited edition 15th-anniversary Transparent Silver edition with custom paper obi and deluxe edition b-sides and remix downloads. Black City is considered a critical and commercial breakthrough for the Michigan-based 2 producer/vocalist/songwriter/DJ and founding Ghostly International artist. Pitchfork named Black City "Best New Music”: "The versatile, prolific techno and pop artist crafts a dark, funk-driven record that may be the best of his career." Included in Pitchfork’s Top 50 Albums of 2010: "...it's not too surprising when Dear takes Reznor's ‘Closer’ pulse out for a moonless 4 a.m. test drive on ‘You Put a Smell on Me.’ With Black City, Dear offers a precisely thought-out guide to losing your mind.” On the occasion of Ghostly's 25th Anniversary and Black City’s 15th Anniversary, Ghostly and Matthew Dear present a special Transparent Silver vinyl repressing. Released in 2010, nearly a decade into his craft, Black City was a watershed moment for Matthew Dear. A steely noir set that straddled electronic dance and indie rock classification, earning him Best New Music from Pitchfork and a worldwide tour with a besuited band, the album unlocked Dear's darkest and most engrossing ideas to date. The love-obsessed songwriter of 2007's Asa Breed had given way to a more existentially paranoid entity. Creeping disco tempos, cavernous atmospherics, and strange distortions brought his signature avant-pop sound to a moodier place. Black City wasn't to be found on any map. It was a composite, an imaginary metropolis peopled by desperate cases, lovelorn souls, and amoral motives, with flashes of sweetness and hope. In Black City, nothing is at it seems: leadoff single "Little People (Black City)" is a nine-and-a-half minute disco odyssey, subverting its gleaming electronic lead with eerily giddy backing vocals and cryptic, ominous lyrics ("a frozen wasted heart / has died", "love me like a clown"); "You Put a Smell on Me" is a sordid sex romp set to hysterically chattering percussion and a serrated synth line that will set your teeth on edge; "More Surgery" at first recalls the barely-there Krautrock of Harmonia in its burbling minimalism, until Dear's chanted chorus of "Alter genetics / to make my body glow / I need more surgery / there's so much more to know" sends the track hurtling into a dystopian future. And yet, for all the foreboding moods on Black City, it's the album's sweeter moments that illustrate Matthew Dear's growing maturity as a songwriter. "Slowdance" is a futuristic lullaby in which Dear articulates a lover's helplessness ("I can't be the one to tell you everything's wrong") over breathy, Arthur Russell-esque cello swishes; the album-closing "Gem" is an achingly simple, reverb-drenched piano ballad that ends with a long, slow fade. 

Label:
Ghostly International
Formats:
Vinyl LP
Cat#:
GI120LPC3