
Lush, electronic-tinged indie pop where Aaron Marsh’s crystalline falsetto floats over a bed of velvet synths and stuttering, R&B-influenced percussion.
February 14, 2019 · Tooth & Nail Records
Blushing is the sound of a band fully transcending their rock origins to become master sonic architects. While Copeland has always traded in melody and melancholy, this album swaps the traditional guitar-driven angst of their youth for a sophisticated, nocturnal palette of synthesizers and programmed textures. It feels like a high-definition dream, where every vocal harmony is meticulously placed to create a sense of immense, airy space. It is an album of deep intimacy, sounding as if it were whispered directly into the listener's ear while the rest of the world is asleep.
How does Blushing sound next to the rest of Copeland's catalogue?
Romantic saturates this record far more than the artist's norm.
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