People of the North

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
Tunnels 06:29 Tools
The Vastest Island 09:48 Tools
Summer Leaves 05:36 Tools
Over Me 14:27 Tools
Drama Class 09:27 Tools
Grain Diagrams 09:27 Tools
Coal Baron 08:40 Tools
Era of Manifestations 08:40 Tools
Sub Contra 1 03:29 Tools
Sub Contra 2 02:44 Tools
The Whirling Gift 14:12 Tools
Osage Orange 14:12 Tools
Vise 14:12 Tools
Religion in their Work 14:12 Tools
A Leaky Boat of One's Own 14:12 Tools
Border Waves (Part 1) 20:02 Tools
Border Waves (Part 2) 20:03 Tools
Steep Formations 31:14 Tools
Border Waves 20:05 Tools
Bear Fruit 20:05 Tools
The Caul (Section 1) 15:49 Tools
Surfacing (Section 1) 15:49 Tools
Surfacing (Section 2) 15:49 Tools
The Caul (Section 2) 15:49 Tools
Surfacing (Section 4) 15:49 Tools
Surfacing (Section 3) 15:49 Tools
A Real Thing You Can Know (Section 1) 15:49 Tools
Three Hills in a Day 20:05 Tools
A Real Thing You Can Know (Section 3) 15:49 Tools
A Real Thing You Can Know (Section 2) 15:49 Tools
A Real Thing You Can Know (Section 4) 15:49 Tools
A Real Thing You Can Know (Section 5) 15:49 Tools
Steep Formations (part 1) 00:00 Tools
Steep Formations (Part 2) 15:49 Tools
The Caul 15:49 Tools
Surfacing 15:49 Tools
A Real Thing You Can Know 15:49 Tools
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Started by Kid Millions and Bobby Matador of Oneida, People of the North is an ongoing but sporadic outgrowth of that restlessly experimental Brooklyn assemblage. While there are no clearly defined boundaries separating POTn from Oneida, it might be fair to say that the music tends to be more staunchly devoted to minimalism, repetition, improvisation, and sternness than the wide-ranging efforts of the big brother band. They packaged and unleashed a noisy krautrock behemoth of a jam session in the form of Deep Tissue. Recorded in 2009, it consists of four plodding, hypnotic psychedelic tracks clocking in at around 37 minutes – making it quite the heart-pounding journey. With an obvious penchant for improvisation and the immediate mood, People of the North not only revels in the static charge found in heavy guitar and feedback drenched freak-out moments, but can also be heard mining more pulsing, minimalist territory here. They’re pulling big influence from krautrock innovators Can and Neu! , but there is also a deeper, darker Japanese psych influence here, new and old – Les Rallizes Denudes & Acid Mothers Temple to name a couple. If you’re a fan of any psych, space rock or krautrock, you need to hear this record. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.