Alexander Boe - 'The Experimental'

8/10

In a musical landscape increasingly obsessed with easy labels and quick hits, Alexander Boe arrives like a glorious glitch in the system. His debut album 'The Experimental' is a living, breathing art installation, one that blurs the boundaries between groove, dissonance, and meditative wanderings.

From the very first track 'Who's Afraid Of Virginia Woolf?', you’re plunged into a sonic labyrinth. Percussive loops pulse like a heartbeat beneath layers of guitar lines that shimmer and warp, as if caught between Saharan deserts and Tel Aviv alleyways. It’s hypnotic and disorienting in equal measure, as you feel both grounded and adrift, the mark of music that refuses to play it safe.

Standouts like 'A Greek Myth (Sampled Groove)' distill this ethos perfectly. Built on an obsessive rhythmic loop, it unfolds like a dance floor existential crisis: compulsive, anxious, and impossibly catchy. It’s a track that invites you to move while contemplating the absurdity of endlessly rolling your own artistic boulder uphill.

Then there’s 'Poor Little Rich Girl (Shirley)', a fractured breakup lament that fuses Saharan-inspired guitar melodies with the intimacy of a lo-fi bedroom confession. Vocoder-soaked harmonies push the song beyond the realm of the ordinary, creating a ghostly tension that lingers like cigarette smoke in a late-night cafe.

But the most audacious moment might be the sprawling closer 'Coffee Shops/Broken Legs'. Across eight minutes, the track deconstructs itself in real time, moving from airy whispers and spectral textures into a controlled collapse of glitchy percussion and dissonant synths. It’s a stunning metaphor for the creative process of structure giving way to chaos, only to rebuild itself into something unexpected.

Throughout 'The Experimental', Boe and his bandmates embrace imperfection as a core philosophy. There’s a refusal to polish away the rough edges that feel deeply human. The album isn’t afraid to sit with discomfort or to get lost in its own tangents. It rewards patience and curiosity rather than instant gratification.

At its core, this is a record about dualities: urban tension versus meditative calm, the freedom of repetition against the claustrophobia of modern life, the artist’s hunger to create and the inevitable exhaustion that follows. By leaning into these contradictions, Alexander Boe craft an album that feels like a mirror reflecting back our fractured selves.

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