From the moment the female voice describes the opening
statement, “The waves and the patterns
are merging.” It would start things off with the album’s opener, The Waves. It becomes a disturbing
nightmare that Chris Cordwell and Nick Raybould would create. It has this ‘80s
video game-like structure from Super Mario Bros. 2 as you enter different
parallels of the pyramids with these film-noir like atmospheres as the clock
ticks rapidly.
Then, the powder keg becomes a fuming heat to increase the
next track Rat Race. Nods to Roxy
Music’s The Bogus Man and Bowie’s Earthling-era, it’s a freak-out like no
other. Cordwell and Raybould would duke it out in a boxing ring punching each
other between their instruments. Hay-wiring chaos at its best, it is a batshit
composition that would keep you guessing until the end.
Fluctuate is a
journey into the unknown. A chilled-out futuristic string-section wasteland
that you’ve never seen before while Beatwave
channels Devo’s Oh No! It’s Devo-era
as they have their pumping iron muscles to get your blood flowing for Nick and
Chris tipping their hats to the Spud patrol with a Vivaldi-like crossover.
Mobius Trip becomes
a ladder-climbing composition for the duo. They climb each of the ladders that
transform into various patterns by reaching to the top of the mountain with a
challenging pace by going into a mid-fast tempo for the guitars to slide down
in one section to another.
Devoider closes
the album by leaving the hot temperature levels inside the jungle. Hallucinated
nightmares come to life for Thought Bubble as if they teamed up with Ozric
Tentacles and the Irrlicht-era from
Klaus Schulze. It is a crazy re-arrangement as they take us into a lane filled
with gigantic mushrooms waiting to be eaten for the rest of the month!
Thought Bubble’s ‘Around’ is one of the most mind-boggling debuts that will keep you guessing until the end. ‘Around’ will be talked about in the years to come in the roaring ‘20s. And I hope to hear more from Thought Bubble in the next adventure that awaits them.
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