Earth Division

Earth Division is the tenth EP by Scottish post-rock band Mogwai. It was released on 12 September 2011 through Rock Action Records, and a day later in the USA on Sub Pop. The album could not be released for pre-order, as the entire stocks of the CD were destroyed when the distribution centre for PIAS Entertainment Group was destroyed by fire during the 2011 London riots.[1] The four tracks were recorded during the same sessions as those that produced the band's 2011 album Hardcore Will Never Die, But You Will.[2]

Earth Division
EP by
Released12 September 2011
13 September 2011 (US)
RecordedChem19 Studios
Hamilton, Scotland
Castle of Doom Studios
Glasgow, Scotland
GenrePost-rock
Length16:35
LabelRock Action Records, Sub Pop
ProducerPaul Savage
Mogwai chronology
Hardcore Will Never Die, But You Will
(2011)
Earth Division
(2011)
A Wrenched Virile Lore
(2012)

Release and reception

According to Pitchfork Media, who gave the EP a score of 6.4/10, this release is one of Mogwai's quieter efforts, describing it as "cold and studied" and suggesting that the band are almost in "soundtrack mode".[1] Writing for thefourohfive.com, Heather Steele agreed, saying that "Earth Division sees them completely lose their trademark urgency and instead take a more uniform sense of silence". Steele however was more positive, giving the EP a score of 8/10 and writing that it is the "most splendid of snapshots to demonstrate just how wide-ranging their music is and just what they are still capable of".[2] Drowned in Sound writer Michael Brown concluded that the four songs are "totally different, yet just as essential as the album from which they were excluded", and said that if Mogwai were to make an acoustic album "it certainly wouldn’t be the worst decision they’ve ever made".[3] Andy Gill, The Independent's music critic, like others commented that the music seemed designed for film or TV work, and gave the EP four out of five stars.[4]

Track listing

12", CD and download
No.TitleWriter(s)Length
1."Get to France"John Cummings2:27
2."Hound of Winter" 3:54
3."Drunk and Crazy" 5:29
4."Does This Always Happen?" 4:45

Personnel

gollark: Oh, hey, for some reason it *does* send it to the Organization site.
gollark: Firefox, latest version.
gollark: Why not use Accept-Language if it exists then fall back to GeoIP?
gollark: Whereas Accept-Language isn't sent even though I never configured it to not be.
gollark: Yes, they aren't perfect, but *people don't have that on by default*.

References

  1. Tangari, Joe. "Earth Division EP review". Pitchfork Media. Retrieved 22 October 2011.
  2. Steele, Heather. "Earth Division EP review". thefourohfive.com. Retrieved 22 October 2011.
  3. Brown, Michael. "Earth Division EP review". Drowned In Sound. Retrieved 22 October 2011.
  4. Gill, Andy (16 September 2011). "Earth Division EP review". London: The Independent. Retrieved 22 October 2011.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.