Capturing phantom drones behind dusty beats and haunted twangs, Ellis Swan and James Schimpl return for their third album as Dead Bandit. Locked into a musical language unique to their collaboration, the duo once again put us out to pasture across broad sonic plains, drums flapping like loose fence panels in the prairie breeze and bass rumbling like distant thunder. True to their previous two records, Swan and Schimpl keep the strung out guitars at the front of what they do, whether playing a naked, desolate strum or running six strings through disruptive effects processing until they’re barely recognisable.
But while there are details of disturbance when listening to Dead Bandit‘s self-titled record up close, the wider impression is a smoother, more direct affair that toys with post-rock complexity and matches it with the emotional weight of melodic simplicity, gentle grooves and conscious arrangements. Weeds offsets its languid fuzz guitar with shimmering sustained notes before settling into a patient, heavy-hearted composition charged with heartbreak leads pealing out in the middle distance. Up To Your Waist finds a cautious serenity in the lilt of its swing and wistful, picked-out A-B structure, striking the most open and optimistic tone on the album without ever lost in its own levity.
By comparison, Glass has a smoky, half-hidden backroom quality. Its brushed whisper of a beat, lingering guitar drones and subtle sub bass come on like a dub wise flip of a sad-eyed country ballad. The mood maintains on Half Smoked Cigarette, which captures the grey sky sullenness of post-punk and reframes it in the seductive isolation of rural America. While there’s a thickness to the sound on these most direct of tracks on the album, there’s also fragility inherent to the sound world Dead Bandit have been shaping out over these past few years.
Buttercup swaps sadness for sinister undercurrents, once more drawing on fulsome low end to fill out the sparse threads of instrumentation up top. Pink finds a steady momentum for its own brand of brooding mystery, the sharp end of the beat bringing focus to the many-layered approaches to the guitar which roundly define the Dead Bandit sound. There’s an even clearer direction mapped out in the vintage drum machine pulse of Koyo, all the better to carry swirling effects treatments and moody melodic figures. Even in these ominous climes there’s space for plaintive, endearing hooks which land as the most direct phrases in Dead Bandit‘s musical lexicon to date.
The fundamental sound across this album holds true, but Dead Bandit are never bound to a singular practice. Lucien’s Bitters strikes up a pronounced drum machine beat which comes on like 90s downtempo, and it feels like a natural vessel for the heavy, shoegaze tinted lament of the guitars. At every turn, Swan and Schimpl prove their affinity for all kinds of approaches, and yet the end product is a deeply cohesive, immediate listen that shows just how clear their creative vision really is.
Credits
releases March 14, 2025
Written, produced and recorded by James Schimpl and Ellis Swan
Mastered by Giuseppe Ielasi
Layout by Johannes Schebler
Photos by James and Ellis
License
c + p Quindi Records 2025
all rights reserved
Distributed by wordandsound
Black vinyl 12″
Vinyl / Digital Album
Capturing phantom drones behind dusty beats and haunted twangs, Ellis Swan and James Schimpl return for their third album as Dead Bandit. Locked into a musical language unique to their collaboration, the duo once again put us out to pasture across broad sonic plains, drums flapping like loose fence panels in the prairie breeze and bass rumbling like distant thunder. True to their previous two records, Swan and Schimpl keep the strung out guitars at the front of what they do, whether playing a naked, desolate strum or running six strings through disruptive effects processing until they’re barely recognisable.
But while there are details of disturbance when listening to Dead Bandit‘s self-titled record up close, the wider impression is a smoother, more direct affair that toys with post-rock complexity and matches it with the emotional weight of melodic simplicity, gentle grooves and conscious arrangements. Weeds offsets its languid fuzz guitar with shimmering sustained notes before settling into a patient, heavy-hearted composition charged with heartbreak leads pealing out in the middle distance. Up To Your Waist finds a cautious serenity in the lilt of its swing and wistful, picked-out A-B structure, striking the most open and optimistic tone on the album without ever lost in its own levity.
By comparison, Glass has a smoky, half-hidden backroom quality. Its brushed whisper of a beat, lingering guitar drones and subtle sub bass come on like a dub wise flip of a sad-eyed country ballad. The mood maintains on Half Smoked Cigarette, which captures the grey sky sullenness of post-punk and reframes it in the seductive isolation of rural America. While there’s a thickness to the sound on these most direct of tracks on the album, there’s also fragility inherent to the sound world Dead Bandit have been shaping out over these past few years.
Buttercup swaps sadness for sinister undercurrents, once more drawing on fulsome low end to fill out the sparse threads of instrumentation up top. Pink finds a steady momentum for its own brand of brooding mystery, the sharp end of the beat bringing focus to the many-layered approaches to the guitar which roundly define the Dead Bandit sound. There’s an even clearer direction mapped out in the vintage drum machine pulse of Koyo, all the better to carry swirling effects treatments and moody melodic figures. Even in these ominous climes there’s space for plaintive, endearing hooks which land as the most direct phrases in Dead Bandit‘s musical lexicon to date.
The fundamental sound across this album holds true, but Dead Bandit are never bound to a singular practice. Lucien’s Bitters strikes up a pronounced drum machine beat which comes on like 90s downtempo, and it feels like a natural vessel for the heavy, shoegaze tinted lament of the guitars. At every turn, Swan and Schimpl prove their affinity for all kinds of approaches, and yet the end product is a deeply cohesive, immediate listen that shows just how clear their creative vision really is.
Credits
releases March 14, 2025
Written, produced and recorded by James Schimpl and Ellis Swan
Mastered by Giuseppe Ielasi
Layout by Johannes Schebler
Photos by James and Ellis
License
c + p Quindi Records 2025
all rights reserved
Distributed by wordandsound
Black vinyl 12″
Vinyl / Digital Album