Helvetia

This Devastating Map

Catalog #: JNR343    Release Date: 08/07/2020

$ 22.00 USD  

  • This Devastating Map
  • This Devastating Map
  • This Devastating Map
  • This Devastating Map

Vinyl ships on or before: 2020-27-07

*Physical vinyl colors are each unique due to the nature of the format.
Expect a variation of our mock-up.

SOLD OUT

Track Listing / WATCH
  1. Devastating Map
  2. Inverted
  3. Reaktor
  4. How Does It Feel?
  5. Echo Location
  6. Car Crash
  7. Love Me
  8. We Are Reels
  9. Castle Rock
  10. Those Eyes
  11. 3 Boys
  12. Long Beach

(Bonus Flexi) "Absence" [Edition of 500] 

 

    Description

    Helvetia was formed in Seattle in 2005 by Jason Albertini. Since the band’s inception, he’s employed a rotating cast of band members and collaborators, which now includes Steve Gere and Samantha Stidham. Albertini is 1/3 of the group Duster, who spent 2019 releasing a new album and playing shows for the first time in 20 years. Naturally, Helvetia share a lot of the same sensibilities, pushing Dusterʼs boundary-bending ideals even further out with a mix of odd pop and eccentric oddities.

    Helvetia made their debut in 2006 with The Clever North Wind (released on Duster bandmate Clay Parton's Static Cult label), followed by The Acrobats (2008) and Headless Machine Of The Heart (2009). With each release, Helvetia explored more psych-influenced territory, further developing their take on slow core. After a handful of additional releases for The Static Cult, Albertini relocated to Portland, Oregon, and released 2012ʼs Nothing In Rambling, his first with Joyful Noise Recordings. Albertini joined Built To Spill on bass the same year, and the two bands shared members and toured together. Dromomania, Helvetiaʼs eighth LP, was released in October 2015, followed by the Sun Chasers EP in 2017. Albertini continued to play bass for Built To Spill until 2019, when Duster started playing shows again. After a very busy year of touring, Albertini spent the summer recording This Devastating Map at his home studio.

    While the mighty Duster dwelled in a broken down space station lost to the cosmos, Helvetiaʼs sound is decidedly more earthbound: guitars sparkle and soar beyond their means with hushed vocals transcribing aching personal struggles. Helvetia ditches conventional song structure in favor of bouts of repetition in which Albertini rewards the listener with unlikely hooks, juxtaposing memorable figures with odd shapes that desire repeated listens.

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