7/10
There’s a peculiar magic in albums that unfold slowly, where clarity is optional, but atmosphere is everything. 'Sun and Flamingos', the latest release from Bedolina, lingers, slow and deliberate, like a thought you can’t quite shake. It’s an album that simmers more than it explodes, and that’s precisely where its power lies.
From the first few bars, Bedolina craft an immersive world of shadowed textures and reflective pacing. Guitars swell and the percussion moves with quiet insistence. This is music that knows the weight of restraint.
Ken Gould’s vocal delivery is a key part of the spell. His voice carries the kind of emotional gravity you’d expect from the likes of Nick Cave or Tom Waits with lines that drift between dream logic and grounded pain.
Stylistically, the album dances along a fine line between indie chamber rock and ambient melancholy. There are echoes of bands like Elbow and Grizzly Bear, groups known for their ability to turn introspection into grandeur. Some tracks stretch out into kaleidoscopic, synth-laced journeys, while others shrink inward, revealing bare instrumentation and stark emotion.
What makes Sun and Flamingos feel so alive is its refusal to settle. It embraces contradiction, such as melancholy wrapped in warmth, or tension painted in pastels. Even at its quietest, it hums with an undercurrent of unrest, like something stirring just beneath the surface. The album’s pacing is patient, but never stagnant. It unfolds in slow and pensive waves, but always intentional inn its aesthetic.
With 'Sun and Flamingos', Bedolina has carved out a quiet, thoughtful space in the indie landscape, one that’s not afraid to hang in discomfort or lean into ambiguity. It’s a hauntingly beautiful document of emotional navigation, delivered with craft, care, and a kind of defiant calm.