HomeStore

Alastair Galbraith: Morse 12"

Product image 1

Alastair Galbraith: Morse 12"

A central figure of the New Zealand underground since his days in The Rip over three decades ago, Alastair Galbraith has worked alongside scores of Kiwi legends as a multi-instrumentalist and solo artist. Morse appeared in 1992, a Siltbreeze/Xpressway co-release, and despite Galbraith's centrality to the magical NZ mix, the record is an 'outsider' classic, a peerless piece of Antipodean collage, diverted folk, and minimal psychedelia.

 

Galbraith plays almost everything on Morse, with periodic assists from Bruce Russell, Robbie Muir and others. Mutable, unfussy arrangements--for acoustic and electric guitar, piano, violin, and some proper post-VU thudding--gather and crumble around obliquely phrased double-tracked vocals, sharing an enigmatic yet intuitive emotional quality with much NZ music of the period. And while his process might be homespun, don't call this lo-fi: listen close and hear microscopic layers of detail in Galbraith's plangent guitar work, the texture of amplified strings distinct from the notes they're sounding, melodies and sibilant murmurs swallowed as songs melt or careen into one another.

 

Morse's fragmentary song suites conjure a post-70s in which Syd Barrett fucked off to Dunedin and started roadying for The Clean, or John Cale traded blow for tea and a Tascam. Untouchable in spirit and execution, Morse is a long-undersung gem of the international 90s underground by a bona fide NZ legend.

A central figure of the New Zealand underground since his days in The Rip over three decades ago, Alastair Galbraith has worked alongside scores of Kiwi legends as a multi-instrumentalist and solo artist. Morse appeared in 1992, a Siltbreeze/Xpressway co-release, and despite Galbraith's centrality to the magical NZ mix, the record is an 'outsider' classic, a peerless piece of Antipodean collage, diverted folk, and minimal psychedelia.

 

Galbraith plays almost everything on Morse, with periodic assists from Bruce Russell, Robbie Muir and others. Mutable, unfussy arrangements--for acoustic and electric guitar, piano, violin, and some proper post-VU thudding--gather and crumble around obliquely phrased double-tracked vocals, sharing an enigmatic yet intuitive emotional quality with much NZ music of the period. And while his process might be homespun, don't call this lo-fi: listen close and hear microscopic layers of detail in Galbraith's plangent guitar work, the texture of amplified strings distinct from the notes they're sounding, melodies and sibilant murmurs swallowed as songs melt or careen into one another.

 

Morse's fragmentary song suites conjure a post-70s in which Syd Barrett fucked off to Dunedin and started roadying for The Clean, or John Cale traded blow for tea and a Tascam. Untouchable in spirit and execution, Morse is a long-undersung gem of the international 90s underground by a bona fide NZ legend.

$5.10

Original: $17.00

-70%
Alastair Galbraith: Morse 12"

$17.00

$5.10

Description

A central figure of the New Zealand underground since his days in The Rip over three decades ago, Alastair Galbraith has worked alongside scores of Kiwi legends as a multi-instrumentalist and solo artist. Morse appeared in 1992, a Siltbreeze/Xpressway co-release, and despite Galbraith's centrality to the magical NZ mix, the record is an 'outsider' classic, a peerless piece of Antipodean collage, diverted folk, and minimal psychedelia.

 

Galbraith plays almost everything on Morse, with periodic assists from Bruce Russell, Robbie Muir and others. Mutable, unfussy arrangements--for acoustic and electric guitar, piano, violin, and some proper post-VU thudding--gather and crumble around obliquely phrased double-tracked vocals, sharing an enigmatic yet intuitive emotional quality with much NZ music of the period. And while his process might be homespun, don't call this lo-fi: listen close and hear microscopic layers of detail in Galbraith's plangent guitar work, the texture of amplified strings distinct from the notes they're sounding, melodies and sibilant murmurs swallowed as songs melt or careen into one another.

 

Morse's fragmentary song suites conjure a post-70s in which Syd Barrett fucked off to Dunedin and started roadying for The Clean, or John Cale traded blow for tea and a Tascam. Untouchable in spirit and execution, Morse is a long-undersung gem of the international 90s underground by a bona fide NZ legend.

You may also like

-70%NEW
Thumbnail 1

Action Swingers: Decimation Blvd. 12"

$15.00

$4.50

NEW
Thumbnail 1

Amulet: The First 12"

$30.00

-70%NEW
Thumbnail 1

Ash Borer: Bloodlands 12"

$25.00

$7.50

-70%NEW
Thumbnail 1

Jess And The Ancient Ones: S/T 12"

$35.00

$10.50

-70%NEW
Thumbnail 1Thumbnail 2

Allegiance: Overlooked 12"

$20.00

$6.00

-70%NEW
Thumbnail 1Thumbnail 2

Sanction: Broken In Refraction 12"

$15.00

$4.50

-70%NEW
Thumbnail 1

Kraanium: Slamchosis 12"

$15.00

$4.50

-70%NEW
Thumbnail 1

Eximperituserqethhzebib_iptugakkath_ulweliarzaxu_u: Absorbing Evil.. 12"

$15.00

$4.50

-70%NEW
Thumbnail 1

Wolves In The Throne Room: BBC Session Anno Domini 12"

$15.00

$4.50

NEW
Thumbnail 1

Listener: Wooden Heart 12"

$20.00

NEW
Thumbnail 1

Action Swingers: Complete London Toe Rag Session 12"

$12.00

NEW
Thumbnail 1

Burning//World: Peace Is No Reality 12"

$20.00