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Q Magazine

Five Songs To Hear This Week - Pulled Apart By Horses, Apothek, Lola Colt, Allusondrugs, Luluc

Five Songs To Hear This Week - Pulled Apart By Horses, Apothek, Lola Colt, Allusondrugs, Luluc
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Sorting through the week’s new singles and songs that have surfaced online over the last seven days, Jamie Skey (@jamie_skey) presents five songs you need to hear this week…

If the stormingly psychedelic Hot Squash, the first track to be cut loose from their soon-to-be-released third album Blood, is anything to go by, Leeds’ surreal-core sons Pulled Apart By Horses are on track to make it a hat-trick of wickedly memorable LP deliveries. The track itself finds the quartet in a desert state of mind, though it’s more Queens Of The Stoneage intensity than Tinariwen temperance.  

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If post-dubstep poster-boy James Blake was born in Oslo instead of London, he’d might sound like glitchy-soul duo Apothek, whose new single Family sounds like the quietly intense fallout from the colourful explosion of Bjork’s early records.

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It’s perhaps not beyond the realms of possibility that one day David Lynch and Ennio Morricone will put their heads together for a project, but in the likely event that that doesn’t happen, though, London’s Lola Colt have enticingly approximated that spaghetti-western-noir-pop crossover potential on Diamonds to give us an idea of what we’re missing.

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More alt-rock weirdness from Yorkshire, this time in the  R.E.M-meets-Soundgarden form of spacebar-dodging riffers Allusondrugs. Their third single, Nervous, in step with their cheap-and-cheerful way of operating, sounds like it’s been made on a shoestring budget, but nevertheless brims with raw, spine-shivering emotion.

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Sub Pop signees Luluc (pronounced ‘Lou-Luke’) are yet more proof of how much the Seattle-based label has evolved since the heady days of grunge. The pastoral folk-pop sounds of Without A Face are a far cry from the sludgy, sneering likes of Mudhoney,  nevertheless they’re a welcome addition to the label’s ever-expanding  and eclectic catalogue.

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