Blood – Loving You Backwards [PURPLE VINYL] – New LP
Loving You Backwards, the debut album from Blood, flourishes in the subtle, the ambiguous, the shades of gray. Blood, in the past, made huge, angry, grandiose, operatic songs. Loving You Backwards, is not that. Instead, this debut record is quieter, less reactive, but no less powerful. No less imbued with intensity, no less intricate. Fully realized.
Austin residents Blood used a move into a house together in Philadelphia as a chance to reorient and spend time writing music around the clock. This record encompasses that first generation of Blood, the one that completely immersed itself in their newfound home in Philadelphia and dedicated themselves to the craft of losing oneself in the artform. As they wrote, the sound of the band began to transform. “As an individual, I felt liberated to let the femme shades of my voice show on record for the first time and allowed my first true love for pop melodies to come to the surface,” says lyricist Tim O’Brien. This resulted from a group effort to share the burden of collective grief by holding weekly meetings to discuss mental health. As a collective, they quickly abandoned any former attachments to musical notions of punk or genre at all. They made whatever they made and rehearsed for a future show that they weren’t sure would ever come. As time went on, after the completion of Loving You Backwards, half of the band realized that they needed to leave to pursue other projects and to move onto life independently of the band. The songs on Loving You Backwards exist in the realm of ballads, heart-wrenching and weird pop with a post rock sensibility. It explores, as the title implies, approaching a relationship in the reverse, dealing with your past while you try to stay in the present. O’Brien is a self-professed bookstore gay, and his study of queer history is very much a conceptual underpinning of this record. “One Dimensional Man,” is about the idea that while sex might free us, it also can be a force that distracts us from our oppressors. “I don’t want a spare,” he sings over a wash of guitars, the thud of percussion, “I don’t want your brain to hurt.” Meanwhile “Bone Dry,” is significant because it was written during a paradigm shift within the band. It came together almost instantly. `There’s an immediacy to the song. The song is propulsive, jagged, raw and talky. It’s a delight to listen to, brimming with emotion and huge ideas. The same can be said for all of Loving You Backwards. This is a record of ideas and big honesty, but it’s also a record of genuinely pristine pop.
All music written and performed by:
Zachary Malett
Benjamin McCamman-McGinnis
Julian McCamman-McGinnis
Tim O’Brien
Nino Soberon
Tyler Wolff
Produced, Engineered and Mixed by Dan Howard
Mastered by Ryan Schwabe
Album Art by Emily Lee
Special thanks to:
Mary and the Livingston Family, Justin from Richmond,IN,and our good friends in Family Vision
Everyone who has ever played in the band, fed us or let us crash while on the road, all of our family, friends, and partners, we love you and thank you for the support.