Album of the Week: Lesionread - I gave my robot a brain and it got scared and turned herself off


We did a spotlight on Lesionread after his first EP, 2012, in April. It was the first time I listened to Buffalo, New York student and artist Shawn Lewis’ music, and the beginning of a beautiful friendship. It was the start (for me, and in many ways for Lewis) of a madness that crept around the hardwood floors of Buffalo music venues and lighted our chins. Every time Lesionread performed was different and better, culminating in a dancetastic show at The Tralf opening for Wild Nothing that rallied our spirits, as if the silly string and plastic blow up pool critters were just a distraction from the open chest, the pounding heart of a Buffalo starship.

Lesionread’s latest EP, I gave my robot a brain and it got scared and turned herself off, is a bright light in the warp speed microcosm that Lewis created this year. It’s unifying and personal, but it’s also dark and assuming. It needs to keep moving or it will crack and bleed. Each track (there are 37) is a piece of earth, a chunk of metal, the slippery lips of a cavern. According to Lewis, the EP was inspired by Dan Deacon, Department of Eagles, and Dirty Projectors, especially their early, less conventional work. So it’s no surprise it has an amorphous, amebic quality; what does surprise me is how solid the framework is. Little arms of goofiness splatter the experience with somewhat unoriginal bullshit (Lewis counts to 100 on a track; a Yodaesque voice alerts the listener to the shared human experience of having first-day-jitters; a Spotify ad interrupts the EP midway; we recognize the calm voices of the local music world), but the music itself—the beats, the lyrics, the core—is beautiful.

The major course of Lesionread’s robot is cinematic and modern. The phrase, “I’m happy I’m changing with you” repeats on one track, while the music solders like a hexachord. Every purely musical track is stronger than the one before it, though there are moments of intense brilliance throughout. By the end, the music is simply excellent. Sunspots, robots, and the tiniest human notions, all rolled up into a hot little diamond.

Lesionread and fellow Buffalo electronic musician Kristachuwan are touring now (#LK2013), casting a handful of shimmering dust wherever they go. Check them out, and get Lesionread’s music, including I gave my robot a brain and it got scared and turned herself off, here



0 comments

Post a Comment