Alarmist Release New Track Safarisogood

Dublin instrumental quartet Alarmist have released new track ‘Safisogood’ from their debut LP ‘Popular Demain’.

Dublin instrumental quartet Alarmist have released new track ‘ Safarisogood’ from their debut LP ‘Popular Demain

Alarmist comprised of Neil Crowley, Elis Czerniak, Osgar Dukes and Barry O’Halpin. Their debut LP ‘Popular Demain‘ is an almost orchestral expanse of colour and meandering lines, tightly wrought around a rhythmic core of double drums and guitars.

Recorded in the Meadow studio at the edge of Ireland’s Wicklow Mountains, the album is a natural evolution of from the sound established in the Dublin band’s previous EPs. It carries on the genre-defying fusion of influences that has gained the band a growing international following; primitive Korgs, Casios and tape-degraded voice samples find themselves densely packed with an organic mass of winds, percussion and prepared piano, forming a soundworld that somehow finds common ground for jazz-infused math-rock, warped experimental pop melodies and brutalist slabs of pulsing electronics.

Through the power of online music communities and word-of-mouth spread, Alarmist have developed an ever-growing fanbase in Europe, North America, and beyond, in particular since the release of Pal Magnet which since November 2013 has remained in the top 50 ‘experimental’ releases on Bandcamp worldwide, also featuring on the site’s Staff Picks.

2015 has seen the band embark on a Canadian tour, including an appearance as the sole Irish act at Ottawa Jazz Festival, and a UK tour in April. In the same month, they gave a special 12-piece ensemble performance at Dublin’s MusicTown festival together with experimental jazz groups OKO and Redivider.

Gareth Rooke

October 8, 2015

Hi I'm Gareth, A foolish Welshman that has found himself living in Scotland. I adore live music and this all started back in University when a friend dragged me along to my first gig and I saw Travis. From then on I spent a lot of time going to see bands from rubbish uni bands that had formed one drunken night to the mighty Blur. When I finished uni there was a 10 year gap between gigs (long story). Now though, on any given day of the week I can be found in the venues of Glasgow. With regards to my music taste I love anything with great lyrics and heavy drums. When I was younger (and still am) I was obsessed with a band called Alisha's Attic.
When not at a gig I will be found at my computer playing games like Prison Architect, Hearthstone and Wolfenstein.

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