Inside the Rose
On their fourth album, the visionary English experimenters conjure a sinister and beguiling new world.
With Inside The Rose, the sibling two-piece invite us into their beautiful and brutal vision
A lacklustre return from the one-time sonic wizards of British indie, These New Puritans' 'Inside The Rose' LP, reviewed.
Since debuting with the distressed post-punk of 2008's Beat Pyramid, These New Puritans have made a tradition out of reinvention, approaching composition from surprising new angles and channeling their innate sense of drama into each new evolution.
Marking a slight departure from their neo-classical past, Southend-on-Sea mystics These New Puritans have a punt at pop on Inside The Rose – and it’s a direct hit.
A lot of people don't know what to make of These New Puritans. The trajectory of their career has seen them become ever more "experimental," something of a dirty word in contemporary musical parlance.
Recorded in an industrial, unsparing bit of Berlin, ‘Inside the Rose’ is beloved English eccentrics These New Puritans' first release in
These New Puritans feel like they’ve discovered a formula that means new album 'Inside The Rose' will comfortably prosper for a casual listener.
'Inside The Rose' by These New Puritans, album review, by Adam Williams. The full-length comes out on March 22nd via Infectious/BMG
While not as commercial as they profess, TNP’s fourth album is surprisingly direct and romantic