Wintersleep have always seemed a bit more than ‘just another
indie-rock band’, and not because they're from Nova Scotia (though that
helps...).There's a certain honesty
and evocation to their emotions, which other hipsters can't quite access.And apparently, singer/guitarist Paul
Murphy has it in spades, because he and brother Michael have brought it to
alt-folk in their side-project, Postdata.
Alt-folk from the more northern climes is less
blues-influenced, more solitary and up close, even with the fellas, such as
with Wisconsin native Justin Vernon (Bon Iver - QRO album review), and Halifax's Murphy brothers follow in that
trend on Postdata, starting with the sad, stripped beauty of
opener "Lazarus".While some
touches are added here and there, like the transmission rhythm to "Tracers",
strums of "In Chemicals" and "The Coroner", or darker harmonies in "Tobias
Grey", there isn't a lot of variety, and the record can start to feel a little
one-note, such as the goes-on-too-long "Eclipse".But Postdata is
wisely kept at only nine tracks, under a half hour.
Postdata does have
the feel of an intimate family side-project (like with the lyric about
grandparents on "Lazarus"), but it strips away to reveal the authenticity at
the core of Wintersleep.