Red Burns (album) explained

Red Burns
Type:studio
Artist:Standing on the Corner
Cover:Red_Burns_Cover.jpg
Released:September 11, 2017
Length:1:02:56
Prev Title:Standing on the Corner
Prev Year:2016
Next Title:Afroprojection #1
Next Year:2018

Red Burns is the second album by the American experimental collective Standing on the Corner. It was released on September 11, 2017.

The album features collaborations with their friends and the local New York creative community including MIKE, sLUms, EMC, Lila Ramani from Crumb.[1] [2]

Release

Red Burns was released through their official website on September 11, tying the album and the imagery to the duos connection to New York. Even though their previous album had also been released on the same date the previous year, they revealed that had happened by chance. Escobar detailed the importance of that date and being a New Yorker and the contrast of the sense of vulnerability in a city that otherwise has a very confident character. "As much as you love this place, it's very unforgiving and harsh. It's not easy. There are worse places to be, granted. I think [using the imagery of] the towers, that's the perfect way of saying that without saying that."[3]

Critical reception

Red Burns received acclaim for its genre-bending freeform music and what it manages to capture in an audio-scrapbook manner. Many critics citing the project's ability to capture their essence of New York City. For example, Sheldon Pearce of Pitchfork wrote "Red Burns is a dazzling sensory experience, a city tour in which each track is like a street sign...and Red Burns seems designed as a sort of multidimensional diagram of New York City, the diverse perspectives it shapes, and the varying journeys inside its city blocks."[4] Matthew Strauss described it as "hour-long, uninterrupted piece" that "blends elements of jazz, indie rock, soul, funk, and hip-hop, tossing in poetry, mock radio broadcasts, a lot of samples, and plenty of distortion."[5]

Pitchfork included the music video for “SahBabii /\ Now, Nation End, 38:15” on their list of The Best Music Videos of 2018.[6]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: more info. www.standingonthecorner.com.
  2. Web site: Standing on the Corner’s ‘Red Burns’ and the NYC Revitalization. 4 October 2017. massappeal.com.
  3. Web site: How Standing On The Corner created a visceral snapshot of New York life . Fader . Fader.
  4. Web site: Standing on the Corner: Red Burns. Pitchfork.
  5. Web site: Meet Standing on the Corner, the Post-Genre Crew Whose Music Speaks a Secret Language. Pitchfork.
  6. Web site: The Best Music Videos of 2018. Pitchfork.