[id: three userboxes with the text "this user loves vundabar" in a bold font. each userbox has a different album cover on it, the album covers being good old, either light and devil for the fire. end id.]

#batman#bruce wayne#tim drake#dick grayson#batfamily#batfam#dc fanart




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[id: three userboxes with the text "this user loves vundabar" in a bold font. each userbox has a different album cover on it, the album covers being good old, either light and devil for the fire. end id.]
Vundabar The State House, New Haven, CT 24 October 2021
Look at the way the actor smokes as he leans and cuffs his coat, think Jesus did rise again And I won’t stand for that, but try me I might sit for it, oh baby tell me good things
I was thinking about cars of course, light and water water refracts light and divorces it from its source, which creates a mystery. cars are symbols of human potential and also our self destructive and world-destroying tendencies so we get all the dualities we want with this cover the circles play into this too. - Brandon The image of the water is a photo I took of a lake last summer. Water and light refracting is a major theme in the record and I think this photo struck the right balance between abstraction and realism. It's clearly water, but it's difficult to gauge how big the body of water is, how calm it is, is it an ocean, is is cold or hot? There's a lot to unpack from such a seemingly simple image! I felt the overlapping circles were a good representation of that visual tension and mystery. There's so much reference to driving in the record- that car was an image I'd created a while back and had lying around. I tried it on the cover and the high contrast worked really well. Brandon took the photo on the back while on tour, and it has a magic symmetry to how the figures in it are framed up. All by chance, each figure has a mirrored counterpart. - Drew
Brandon Hagen & Drew McDonald on the inspiration behind Either Light’s visuals, https://www.reddit.com/r/indieheads/comments/fk6v0i/vundabar_ama/
I wrote “Montage Music” (and Either Light) as an exploration of the mythology of American life and culture, with the car as the primary symbol of our paradoxical relationship to ourselves and the world we occupy. Cars are a feat of human inquiry and innovation, indicative of potential and possibility; they’re a force of forward propulsion and thereby a promise of life while being powered by oil and old death, and ultimately careening towards new death — a reality of the CO₂ this technological triumph creates and the (non-)future it presents for our generation and generations to come. In this way, the car is a perversion of the beauty of the life cycle and a physical embodiment of existential dread made novel by its grounding in ecological inevitabilities. Plants grow, blossom, die, and new plants grow out of old plants. Ah, so nice. The car streamlines this process but consequently depletes it, thereby denying the possibility of its repetition, breaking the chain and denying beauty with a beautiful machine. The paradox is there, we gun for the top, glory and immortality, not realizing the peak is the upturned tip of a sinking ship. We want a peak, not a circle; we want all the life now. We’re the asshole at the buffet table that ate all the crab rangoon, but when we finish we feel nauseous, a little ashamed and, dang it, we got rangoon all over our favorite Tommy Bahama button-down t-shirt. The car is a loaded symbol. A sex death machine. A black horse, and we all kinda want to ride it, but we’re torn between the awe and terror of its potentials — those being an annex of our own potentials to the nth degree, packaged up and upholstered into an aesthetically pleasing machine. There’s also a sense of fate and destiny with travel. There are two fates — that of the passenger as an individual and that of the car itself, the latter informing and enclosing the former. It’s unclear where it’s heading, who’s driving and what’s burning in the engine, but the feeling of movement is exciting and the leather seats are nice, even if they must come with the forfeit of control (ironically to a machine that is an attempt at furthering human control). Tony Soprano was a source of inspiration for this record, because I see him as someone who chooses to take that ride and who’s naive enough to believe that he can sway it. Tony, and characters like him, drive around in seductive cars, engrossed in a set of American ideals (rugged individualism, bootstrapping, “strong silent type”) that historically end in their dying. I like Tony Soprano because his story makes the sometimes implicit brutality of American life and capitalism explicit. Tony’s caught in a moving car, bound by forces larger himself, and in taking the ride he condemns himself. On the opposite pole of all this doom and gloom, I used light and water as an essential version of everything a car symbolically is, but without the decisive end the car brings. There’s an innate restorative quality to water and light that predates our interpretation and control that creates a perfect circle. This record has many moments that take pause to notice light and water, and they’re an attempt to recognize a cycle outside of our own and sit in the sensory pleasure they provide. On the cover of the record we see two circles, two lights, the original one, essential and outside of our control, which provides life and renewal, and then our wonky circle that tries to enact control over life and in doing so suffocates it. The record present two lights, two circles, and a choice between either.
Brandon Hagen, https://www.talkhouse.com/introducing-vundabars-montage-music/, February 26, 2020
Either Light by Vundabar Album Review
7.5/10
A really great distraction from how weird life is right now. I would suggest just putting your headphones on and listening to this album all the way through as you go about your daily tasks. It’s pleasant, interesting indie rock by an unassuming Boston rock band, made up of a couple of guys on bass, guitar, drums and vocals; so simple and chill, yet their music is so well done. It’s not overwhelming or loud or too much, but just the right amount to lift you up.
RIYL: Surf Curse, Current Joys, Vacations
https://open.spotify.com/album/0hyxilH78jdXnDAoMr7OhZ?si=h5xJoRvVTV6GwQtjSeSffw
Instagram:@vundabores
Either Light - Vundabar
Either Light – Vundabar
Out of It Burned Off Codeine Petty Crime Easier Never Call Montage Music Jester Paid For Other Flowers Wax Face SONG LIST TIME Out of It 2:38 Burned Off 3:43 Codeine 3:28 Petty Crime
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Vundabar – Petty Crime
Amerikalı grup Vundabar, 13 Mart’ta yayınlayacağı Either Light albümünü oluştururken The Sopranos dizisindeki Tony Soprano karakterinden ilham aldığını açıklıyor. Vundabar’a ait Petty Crimes kaydına ait video paylaşıldı.