Pelican
City of Echoes
Thrill Jockey
/
2023
Includes Instant Download
2LP (clear blue)
36.99
thrill559lpx / Includes Download Code
Gatefold sleeve, incl. printed inner sleeves
Incl. VAT plus shipping / Orders from outside the EU are exempt from VAT
Tracklist
1Bliss In Concrete (Remastered)5:30
2City Of Echoes (Remastered)7:06
3Spaceship Broken - Parts Needed (Remastered)6:04
4Winds With Hands (Remastered)3:57
5Dead Between The Walls (Remastered)5:06
6Lost In The Headlights (Remastered)4:10
7Far From Fields (Remastered)5:18
8A Delicate Sense Of Balance (Remastered)5:26
9Pink Mammoth 6:30
10City of Echoes (Bear Creek Demo)7:42
11Bliss in Concrete (October 2006 Demo)5:27
12Lost in the Headlights (October 2006 Demo)4:08
13Winds With Limbs 3:57
14End of Seasons (Prefuse 73 remix)8:36

City of Echoes, originally released in 2007 by Hydra Head Records, marked a paradigm shift for Pelican. Coming off the heels of the glacial Australasia and their even more expansive and acclaimed follow-up The Fire In Our Throats Will Beckon The Thaw, their third album is a study in precision. Inspired by their non-stop tour schedule following The Fire’s release, the quartet composed City of Echoes to be a lean powerhouse of non-stop melodic hooks and lurching rhythms that reflected the energy of live performance.

15 years after the album’s release, Pelican and Thrill Jockey are proud to present City of Echoes in a deluxe 2xLP edition newly remastered by Josh Bonati and featuring a full LP-worth of bonus material, including original album demos, alternate takes, and pieces originally only available on the rare Pink Mammoth EP.

With City of Echoes, Pelican defied expectations and set themselves apart from the single-minded thrum of retreading old ground. The more concise pieces trade breadth and rumination for a distinct clarity and a razor’s edge for hook-driven songcraft. Guitarists Trevor Shelley de Brauw and Laurent Schroeder-Lebec trade crisp riffs that twirl in opposition before thundering together in monoliths. The sheer amount of potent interplay between the two, often borrowing from disparate edges of rock and metal at a whim before completely transforming, is mind-boggling. Bassist Bryan Herweg and rhythm section compatriot/drummer/brother Larry Herweg lock into a wider array of grooves than ever before. Their considered bedrock guide the band’s dynamics into some of the ensemble’s most tender moments as well as their most ferocious. City of Echoes stands as a testament to Pelican’s ability to reconfigure the grandeur and force of their sound without ever repeating themselves.