Bag Raider’s long overdue and lovingly anticipated debut self-titled
album is finally complete. Now the boys are ready to sit back, kick
their feet up and enjoy the sound of jaws collectively dropping across
the planet as they deliver one of the most well rounded and unique debut
pop albums of the year.
Bag Raiders are the combined talents of Jack Glass and Chris Stracey.
Together, they produce the sparks of light, aural gems and sonic booms
that make up one of the most sought-after up and coming duos on the
planet. After dropping singles on Bang Gang 12s (Fun Punch, Turbo Love)
and remixing the likes Cut Copy, Midnight Juggernauts and Kid Sister,
the two’s reputation internationally grew, and when they released a
little ditty titled ‘Shooting Stars’ they reached every dangerous, dark
and smokey corner of the world, making them a household name among
in-the-know indie kids, the sweaty dance faithful and the DJs across the
globe.
A collection of thoughts, ideas and memories, Bag Raiders transcends
typical dance and pop boundaries, showcasing the creativity of a band at
the forefront of modern production. The album ticks the right boxes
for fans new and old, coming correct with sing-a-long choruses,
deep-breath anthems, blissful chill and pure dancefloor energy. In short
Bag Raiders debut album adds a new dimension in the cluttered and
diluted dance world.
The boys recorded the album deep inside their secret inner-city bunker,
where they grew colonial beards and shut out all natural light, choosing
only to surface for fine wine and an assortment of snorkeling trips.
Amidst the candle light and dripping taps they agonised over structures,
waveforms and patterns possessed by a mad desire to reproduce a
synaesthesic wonderland they could picture but could not see.
Part of these precise experiments entailed hand picking a slew of
special guests including Dan Black, Rhys Taylor (Ted & Francis),
Simon Jones (The Holidays), Gisselle Rosselli (Crave You), Martin
Solomon (Wim), and putting their vocal chords to work in a union of
sweet melodies.
The first taste of the record and sequel to the aforementioned Shooting
Stars will be the first single Way Back Home. This swirling anthemic
affair is a dancefloor call to arms (or hands in the air), with a
beautifully moody performance by Martin Soloman from Sydney band Wim,
who broods his way through a poignant display of affection, percussion
and ecstasy.
The record spirals into a matrix of colour from the opening second of
the house-inspired Castles In The Air. We are then taken through to the
soon-to-be festival favourite Sunlight featuring Dan Black, to the
soulful crooning on So Demanding, a daze inducing electro-lullaby.
Prelude represents a new side of the dancing duo, a slow-burning
instrumental centerpiece that takes the album on an express train to
Musicality Central. The album then thumps along with one foot rooted in
the dance world and the other kicking up pop-dust as we are treated with
more delights before wrapping up with the epic closer Way Back Home.
Chances are, if you’ve stumbled into a club, wobbled at a party, looked
into the light at a festival or dawdled along the radio dial in the last
2 years, you’ve been inadvertently exposed to the Bag Raiders. The
culmination of these moments and experiences you may well have forgotten
is now here, in 49 minutes of take home, glistening glory. Bon appétit.
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