Th Blisks
Elixa
Efficient Space
/
2024
LP
24.99
ES037
Incl. VAT plus shipping / Orders from outside the EU are exempt from VAT
Tracklist
1Enchancity
2Do You Bless It?
3No Know
4Elixa
5Knuckledust
6Esk
7Umbrah
8E v E

Following »How So?«, Th Blisks – Yuta Matsumura (Low Life/Oily Boys), Amelia Besseny (Troth/Impatiens) and Cooper Bowman (Tsap/Troth) – 

return with a mutant strain of outsider pop, melodica dub, torched hip-hop breaks, post-punk and procession song, recommended for listeners of Hype Williams, Peaking Lights or Carla dal Forno.

Th Blisks' members have many notches on their collective belt. Amelia Besseny and Altered States Tapes’ founder Cooper Bowman are prolific in their ritualistic ambient-pop duo Troth, while Yuta Matsumura holds a formidable Sydney punk band pedigree on top of his Low Company-backed solo work. A reward for those who took the time to dig it out, Th Blisks’ 2022 debut How So? was a DIY creation that fully embraced its outsider roots, revelling in opportunities for connection through pop flourishes. Feeling like it might have been a one-off, we proclaim their return with Elixa.

With an unseen clarity of vision, Elixa conjures its meticulously fleshed out world. Those familiar pieces are all there - the mystery, the patience, a cheeky pop hook - however this time there's an intentionality to it all. A blurred dialogue stretching across Australia, it was largely recorded remotely with tracks bouncing between Bowman and Besseny in Muloobinba (Newcastle) and Nipaluna (Hobart), and Matsumura stationed in Warumpi (Papunya). Every element is carefully considered, stemming from their individual time spent as lifers in the local DIY scenes. Through these tracks you can feel that history; echoes of Castings and Vincent Over The Sink in ‘Do You Bless It?’, Bowman's distinctive submerged tape loops gurgling away under boom bap and that Sydney guitar tone in ‘Esk’.

Elixa attempts to bottle some pinged-eye wonder at the magic surrounding, whether in the city or the bush. Informed by the old but drug into The New, it is a begrudgingly current Australien record that respectively nods at the UK’s sound history.