Four Picks: 4 Celebrations of Eclecticism

All of a sudden three mystic animals meet no less mystic abstraction in this episode. However, the common feature is that all four works are notably eclectic.

1. Sun Q – Myth (2023)

🇷🇺 The first album for our episode comes from the Russian band although it is truly international one. Being mixed in England and mastered in the United States, it received a choir parties from Uganda and the artwork from Brazil. Regarding the music, you’ll hear Soviet synthesizers, African percussion, and even Swedish nyckelharpa in a row. The project delivers the pure inspiration from the 1960s and later times, carefully adjusting all the elements to make the Myth complete. In the end, this eclecticism can make you fall in love.

Get this album via bandcamp | spotify | deezer | apple | youtube | yandex

2. Manic Sheep – Morning Fragment (2023)

🇹🇼 Heading to the East, we find ourselves in Taiwan. The local band enriches their alternative rock with the shadows and reflections. Coming from the vague memories, these subtle sounds reincarnate and the forgotten dream becomes the reality.

Get this album via bandcamp | spotify | deezer | apple | youtube

3. Gondhawa – Ka​̈​ampa​̂​la (2021)

🇫🇷 This album has a tremendous volume of energy captivated inside. Click the play button to release it and immediately you’ll transfer yourself center of a hurricane. Something weird is happening here. These brash sounds accompanied by the lyrics in the unknown language, but it’s so catchy, folks!

Get this album via bandcamp | spotify | deezer | apple | youtube | yandex

4. Grant the Sun – Voyage (2023)

🇳🇴 The heavier fraction of eclecticism is represented by Norwegian trio Grant the Sun. The guys involve a lot from all sorts of rock and metal with no hesitation. I especially like it when the tempo slows down and you simply relish the might of the riff and extreme expressiveness of the scream.

Get this album via bandcamp | spotify | deezer | apple | youtube

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