Known for their studied sound and supercharged live performances, Casper Skulls have been hailed by the likes of FADER, MTV and Billboard. On the back of their live shows opening for Thurston Moore, The Julie Ruin, PUP, and Charly Bliss, they’re one of the most exciting emerging Canadian bands.
There was already a palpable distance between the scrappy young noiseniks who first turned heads with their debut single, “King of Gold,” in 2015, to 2016’s artfully buzzing Lips and Skull EP, and then a year later the more contemplative and confidently nuanced full-length, Mercy Works. On Knows No Kindness, their sophomore album to be released in Nov 2021 by Next Door Records, Casper Skulls become the otherworldly outfit hinted at in Mercy Works, on 2018’s “O My Enemy,” and last year’s Françoise Hardy cover, “Ou va la chançe.” KNK functions as a collage of memories that have shaped St-Pierre from her youth in Northern Ontario through to adulthood in Toronto. Each song tells a story of an experience that has affected the course of her life.
There’s a new depth to the arrangements here, realized with an arsenal of ethereal effects, illustrative percussion, cinematic guitar noise, and vividly on-point singing and songwriting, picking up melodically where SOCAN Songwriting Prize-nominated devastator “Lingua Franca” left off. Casper Skulls have been ready for their closeup for a while. With KNK, they’ve gone and made an album that’s simply too good to neglect.
Source [Spotify]
out on March 29, 2023
via Next Door Records
out on November 11, 2022
via Next Door Records
out on November 12, 2021
via Next Door Records