Tropical Fuck Storm take out Beat Reader’s Album of the Year
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20.12.2018

Tropical Fuck Storm take out Beat Reader’s Album of the Year

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We called out to the people and they responded: Tropical Fuck Storm have claimed Beat Reader’s Album of the Year 2018 with A Laughing Death in Meatspace.

The album was selected by Beat readers over a two-week voting period which closed on Wednesday December 19. Honourable hat-tips go to:

Courtney Barnett — Tell Me How You Really Feel

Marlon Williams — Make Way for Love

Rolling Blackouts Coastal Fever — Hope Downs

The Goon Sax — We’re Not Talking

Also, thumbs up to the one reader who voted for Ariana Grande’s Sweetener, which was undoubtedly an iconic pop album but not the best release in the eyes of the readership. If you voted at all, thanks for getting involved, we hope you stick around in the new year.

Here’s what resident music expert Kate Streader had to say about A Laughing Death in Meatspace back in May:

With their sweltering first single ‘Chameleon Paint’, Tropical Fuck Storm made it known upfront that Gareth Liddiard and Fiona Kitschin weren’t here to replicate The Drones.

Above all else, A Laughing Death In Meatspace is fresh – possibly the most inspired record to hit this year. The lyrics are consistently clever, often riddled with wordplay and snarky social commentary – though, never elitist or entitled – while the bone-rattling riffs are a force to be reckoned with in and of themselves.

Much like the band itself, the record isn’t here to tread lightly or beat around the bush, with every moment attacking with the force of a rabid dog, jaws bared and spit flying. It’s carefully constructed chaos – never rigid, yet detailed and deliberate. The raucous riffs and apparent disorder are contrasted perfectly with quick-witted one-liners that fit together like verbal jigsaw pieces.

‘Antimatter Animals’ serves an overflowing soup of swirling fuzz guitar accompanied by a barrage of one liners; ‘Soft Power’ is anything but soft and all power as abrasive guitar refrains reverberate against chanted chorus lines; ‘Shellfish Toxin’ swells eerily as it morphs from summery, seagull-filled serenity in a distorted, chaotic jumble; and ‘A Laughing Death In Meatspace’ brings with it a chance for reprieve, the stripped back melody and softly sung lyrics serving as a chance to come up for air among its full-throttle counterparts.

Each track brings a distinctive chapter to the overall narrative that is A Laughing Death in Meatspace. ‘Chameleon Paint’ and ‘Rubber Bullies’ are rhythmic to the point of catharsis while ‘The Future of History’ is calculated and cool-headed. Throughout, Liddiard, Kitschin and bassist/vocalist Erica Dunn share the vocals, often harmonising as a trio or taking turns on the lead, which lends an inimitable feel to each song as well as mirroring the textural nature of the melodies at play. If this is just the first taste of Tropical Fuck Storm, we’re in for a hell of a ride.