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UK / US
Album artwork for I Can Feel The Night Around Me by Nightlands

I Can Feel the Night Around Me, the third album from Philadelphia's Nightlands, showcases Dave Hartley's finely tuned ability to layer his voice and conjure some of the most beautiful and elaborate virtual choirs in modern music. If his first two records were vocal layering experiments, his third stands as Hartley's thesis statement: "I was determined to use vocal stacking to enable my songwriting, not shroud or obscure it." He recorded most of the album alone in a cold warehouse basement, which he affectionately calls The Space - it's where The War on Drugs (of whom Hartley has been a core member for the past decade) formerly rehearsed and stored their equipment. Indeed the music seems more geographically inspired by the microclimates of the Lost Coast and the moonrises of Big Sur than the post-industrial cityscape of North Philadelphia. Perhaps his periodic westward sojourns and healthy obsessions with mid-career Beach Boys albums and Denis Johnson's Already Dead: A California Gothic were influencing him more than he was aware.

Nightlands

I Can Feel The Night Around Me

Western Vinyl
Album artwork for I Can Feel The Night Around Me by Nightlands
CD

£12.99

Released 05/05/2017Catalogue Number

wv158cd

Album artwork for I Can Feel The Night Around Me by Nightlands
LP

£22.99

Released 05/05/2017Catalogue Number

wv158lp

Nightlands

I Can Feel The Night Around Me

Western Vinyl
Album artwork for I Can Feel The Night Around Me by Nightlands
CD

£12.99

Released 05/05/2017Catalogue Number

wv158cd

Album artwork for I Can Feel The Night Around Me by Nightlands
LP

£22.99

Released 05/05/2017Catalogue Number

wv158lp

I Can Feel the Night Around Me, the third album from Philadelphia's Nightlands, showcases Dave Hartley's finely tuned ability to layer his voice and conjure some of the most beautiful and elaborate virtual choirs in modern music. If his first two records were vocal layering experiments, his third stands as Hartley's thesis statement: "I was determined to use vocal stacking to enable my songwriting, not shroud or obscure it." He recorded most of the album alone in a cold warehouse basement, which he affectionately calls The Space - it's where The War on Drugs (of whom Hartley has been a core member for the past decade) formerly rehearsed and stored their equipment. Indeed the music seems more geographically inspired by the microclimates of the Lost Coast and the moonrises of Big Sur than the post-industrial cityscape of North Philadelphia. Perhaps his periodic westward sojourns and healthy obsessions with mid-career Beach Boys albums and Denis Johnson's Already Dead: A California Gothic were influencing him more than he was aware.