Skip to content
*Free UK Delivery over £75 or Collect from your nearest Assai Records
*Free UK Delivery over £75 or Collect from your nearest Assai Records

Soundcarriers Celeste Vinyl LP 2023 Ltd Dinked Archive Edition #13

Sold out
Original price £28.99 - Original price £28.99
Original price
£28.99
£28.99 - £28.99
Current price £28.99
Cat no. PHOSLP002DE

Dinked Archive Edition #13

  • Deluxe “Sunny-Side Up” orange-in-white 2LP *
  • A3 poster *
  • Inner sleeves contain unseen photos & new liner notes by Jim Gavin (Lodge 49 creator)
  • Remastered with newly designed artwork
  • Hand-numbered edition *
  • Dinked Archive obi-strip & gold foil sticker *
  • Includes instrumental mixes & two unreleased alternate mixes
  • Limited pressing of 400 *

*EXCLUSIVE to Dinked Edition

Tracklist:

LP 1

1. Last Broadcast
2. Step Outside
3. Morning Haze
4. Broken Sleep
5. Long Highway
6. Rolling On
7. There Only Once
8. Out of Place

LP 2

1. Signals
2. Rise and Fall
3. Hideaway
4. Celeste
5. Long Highway (Inst.)
6. Out of Place (Inst.)
7. There Only Once (Inst.)
8. Last Broadcast (Alt. mix)
9. Celeste (Alt.mix)

*Limited to 1 copy per customer/household, multiple orders will be cancelled without notice.

There's something intangible about ‘Celeste’, The Soundcarriers’ second album, originally released in 2010. It has a light, lucid quality, almost like driving exhausted through a strange city at night. Freeflowing yet tethered, dreamy yet attacking, the band continue the fight to reconcile competing impulses. Various threads just about keep the shimmering tapestry from tearing. Haunting folk melodies underpinned by rhythmic static and the physicality of the totally analogue recording and mixing, baroque keyboard counterpoints and sweeping arrangements. The opener “Last Broadcast” seems to encapsulate this but it's almost as if the album gets the angst out of its system with this track and is free to explore the quieter, less crowded back streets. After the smoke of “Last Broadcast” has cleared, the twisting road takes in the soft introspection of “Hideaway” and “Morning Haze”, both tracks morphing into heavy psyche grooves or the eastern tinged psyche funk of “Signals” and “Rise And Fall”. Or takes another turn with the tightly arranged opening segment of “Long Highway”. Somehow it still manages to fit in ‘60s pop gems like “There Only Once”. An album to really lose yourself in, yet more concise than the sprawling Harmonium and more relaxed and free-flowing than the nervy rush of Entropicalia, Celeste could be arguably their most indispensable album and not to damn it with faint praise, their most listenable.