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REFERENCE radio Alternative Logic Live
Following up on their stellar debut Lies to Love For, Darmstadt, Germany’s six-piece collective Electric Horsemanreturns with Under the Weather—an album that beautifully captures the bittersweet friction of moving forward while looking back. If their first record was about sorting through the wreckage of the past, this album is about driving straight into the fog of the unknown, fully embracing the damp, atmospheric weight of its title.
Musically, the band operates like a well-oiled machine that deliberately keeps a few loose screws for the sake of character. They trade sterile studio perfectionism for warm, spontaneous, and immediate performances. The sonic landscape here is a rich tapestry that stretches comfortably from classic 1970s folk-rock to angular 21st-century indie rock, dipping its toes into psychedelic and alt-country waters along the way.
The beating heart of Under the Weather lies in how the band balances density with space. The songs are layered with lush guitar work and vintage-leaning keyboard pads, yet nothing feels crowded.
“Night Alliance”: A masterful thesis statement for the entire album. The track builds from a crisp, ear-catching overture of interweaving guitars and keys before settling into an expansive rhythm section. It’s heavily driven by intricate, warm basslines and steady, texturally brilliant drum work that holds down the groove. What truly elevates this track, however, is the vocal delivery; the addition of cascading harmonies gives the song an immersive, cinematic depth.
“Hideaways”: A brilliant display of their sharper alternative rock tendencies. Here, the guitars transition effortlessly from jangly, polished indie hooks to generous, tastefully distorted notes that show off the band’s heavier live-energy capabilities.
What makes Electric Horseman so captivating is their commitment to genuine, organic chemistry. In a landscape often dominated by grid-aligned digital pop production, Under the Weather feels remarkably human. The six-piece outfit allows the natural interaction between players to dictate the emotional weight of each song.
It’s a record that borrows the best parts of your parents’ vinyl collection—nodding to the timeless craftsmanship of Americana and folk-rock—and runs it through a refreshingly modern alternative filter. For anyone who appreciates atmospheric depth, stellar songwriting, and the undeniable magic of a band simply locked in a groove together, Under the Weather is a journey well worth taking.
Rating: 4.5 / 5
Written by: live@referenceradio.com
Alternative Alternative- Rock Indie
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