
Preoccupations Deluxe Bundle
When the four members of Preoccupations wrote and recorded their new record, they were in a state of near total instability. Years-long relationships ended; they left homes behind. Frontman Matt Flegel, guitarist Danny Christiansen, multi-instrumentalist Scott Munro and drummer Mike Wallace all moved to different cities. They resolved to change their band name, but hadnât settled on a new one. And their road-tested, honed approach to songwriting was basically thrown out the window. This time, they walked into the studio with the gas gauge near empty, buoyed by one another while the rest of their lives were virtually unrecognizable and rootless. There was no central theme or idea to guide the bandâs collective cliff jump. As a result, âPreoccupationsâ bears the visceral, personal sound of holding onto some steadiness in the midst of changing everything.
Flegel is quick to point out how little mystery is in the titles of these songs: Anxiety, Monotony, Degraded, Stimulation, Fever.  âMonotony is a dead end job; Anxiety is changing as a band,â he says.  âMemory is watching someone lose their mind; Fever is comforting someone. Itâs all drawing from very specific things.â These things â bigger ones like breakups, smaller ones like simply trying to calm someone down â  are ultimately the things that explode our brains, that keep us up at night. And so where their previous album âViet Congâ was built in some ways on the abstract cycles of creation and destruction, âPreoccupationsâ explores how that sometimes-suffocating, sometimes-revelatory trap affects our lives. âWe discarded a lot, reworking songs pretty ruthlessly,â Munro explains. âWe ripped songs down to the studs, taking one piece we liked and building something new around it. It was pretty cannibalistic, I guess. Existing songs were killed and used to make new ones.â  Sonically, itâs still blistering.  But itâs a different kind of blister, less the the scorched earth of the bandâs previous LP, more like a blood blister on a fingertip: something immediate and physical that you push and stare at. Itâs yours. Â
Opener âAnxietyâ articulates that tension: clattering sounds drift into focus, bouncing and echoing off one another until one bone-shattering moment when the full band strikes at once, moving from something untouchable to get to something deeply felt. âMonotonyâ moves at a narcoleptic pace by Preoccupationsâ standards, but snaps to attention to make its point, that âthis repetitionâs killing you // itâs killing everyone.â  âStimulationâ opens with a snarl and hurls itself forward at what feels like a million bpm, pausing for one mortal moment of relief before barreling onward. âDegradedâ surprises, with something like a traditional structure and an almost pop-leaning melody to its chorus, twisting the bigness of Preoccupationsâ music to sideswipe the clear, finite smallness of its subjects and events. And the 11-minute-long âMemoryâ is the albumâs keystone, with an intimate narrative and a truly timeless post-punk center. Thereâs love piercing through the iciness here, fighting its way forward in each of the songâs distinct sections.Â
As always, there is something crystalline to what theyâve made, a blast of cold air in a burning hot place. All this adds up to Preoccupations: a singular, bracing collection that proves whatâs punishing can also be soothing, everything can change without disrupting your compass. Your best year can be your worst year at the same time.  Whatever sends you flying can also help you land.
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Preoccupations Deluxe Bundle
When the four members of Preoccupations wrote and recorded their new record, they were in a state of near total instability. Years-long relationships ended; they left homes behind. Frontman Matt Flegel, guitarist Danny Christiansen, multi-instrumentalist Scott Munro and drummer Mike Wallace all moved to different cities. They resolved to change their band name, but hadnât settled on a new one. And their road-tested, honed approach to songwriting was basically thrown out the window. This time, they walked into the studio with the gas gauge near empty, buoyed by one another while the rest of their lives were virtually unrecognizable and rootless. There was no central theme or idea to guide the bandâs collective cliff jump. As a result, âPreoccupationsâ bears the visceral, personal sound of holding onto some steadiness in the midst of changing everything.
Flegel is quick to point out how little mystery is in the titles of these songs: Anxiety, Monotony, Degraded, Stimulation, Fever.  âMonotony is a dead end job; Anxiety is changing as a band,â he says.  âMemory is watching someone lose their mind; Fever is comforting someone. Itâs all drawing from very specific things.â These things â bigger ones like breakups, smaller ones like simply trying to calm someone down â  are ultimately the things that explode our brains, that keep us up at night. And so where their previous album âViet Congâ was built in some ways on the abstract cycles of creation and destruction, âPreoccupationsâ explores how that sometimes-suffocating, sometimes-revelatory trap affects our lives. âWe discarded a lot, reworking songs pretty ruthlessly,â Munro explains. âWe ripped songs down to the studs, taking one piece we liked and building something new around it. It was pretty cannibalistic, I guess. Existing songs were killed and used to make new ones.â  Sonically, itâs still blistering.  But itâs a different kind of blister, less the the scorched earth of the bandâs previous LP, more like a blood blister on a fingertip: something immediate and physical that you push and stare at. Itâs yours. Â
Opener âAnxietyâ articulates that tension: clattering sounds drift into focus, bouncing and echoing off one another until one bone-shattering moment when the full band strikes at once, moving from something untouchable to get to something deeply felt. âMonotonyâ moves at a narcoleptic pace by Preoccupationsâ standards, but snaps to attention to make its point, that âthis repetitionâs killing you // itâs killing everyone.â  âStimulationâ opens with a snarl and hurls itself forward at what feels like a million bpm, pausing for one mortal moment of relief before barreling onward. âDegradedâ surprises, with something like a traditional structure and an almost pop-leaning melody to its chorus, twisting the bigness of Preoccupationsâ music to sideswipe the clear, finite smallness of its subjects and events. And the 11-minute-long âMemoryâ is the albumâs keystone, with an intimate narrative and a truly timeless post-punk center. Thereâs love piercing through the iciness here, fighting its way forward in each of the songâs distinct sections.Â
As always, there is something crystalline to what theyâve made, a blast of cold air in a burning hot place. All this adds up to Preoccupations: a singular, bracing collection that proves whatâs punishing can also be soothing, everything can change without disrupting your compass. Your best year can be your worst year at the same time.  Whatever sends you flying can also help you land.
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When the four members of Preoccupations wrote and recorded their new record, they were in a state of near total instability. Years-long relationships ended; they left homes behind. Frontman Matt Flegel, guitarist Danny Christiansen, multi-instrumentalist Scott Munro and drummer Mike Wallace all moved to different cities. They resolved to change their band name, but hadnât settled on a new one. And their road-tested, honed approach to songwriting was basically thrown out the window. This time, they walked into the studio with the gas gauge near empty, buoyed by one another while the rest of their lives were virtually unrecognizable and rootless. There was no central theme or idea to guide the bandâs collective cliff jump. As a result, âPreoccupationsâ bears the visceral, personal sound of holding onto some steadiness in the midst of changing everything.
Flegel is quick to point out how little mystery is in the titles of these songs: Anxiety, Monotony, Degraded, Stimulation, Fever.  âMonotony is a dead end job; Anxiety is changing as a band,â he says.  âMemory is watching someone lose their mind; Fever is comforting someone. Itâs all drawing from very specific things.â These things â bigger ones like breakups, smaller ones like simply trying to calm someone down â  are ultimately the things that explode our brains, that keep us up at night. And so where their previous album âViet Congâ was built in some ways on the abstract cycles of creation and destruction, âPreoccupationsâ explores how that sometimes-suffocating, sometimes-revelatory trap affects our lives. âWe discarded a lot, reworking songs pretty ruthlessly,â Munro explains. âWe ripped songs down to the studs, taking one piece we liked and building something new around it. It was pretty cannibalistic, I guess. Existing songs were killed and used to make new ones.â  Sonically, itâs still blistering.  But itâs a different kind of blister, less the the scorched earth of the bandâs previous LP, more like a blood blister on a fingertip: something immediate and physical that you push and stare at. Itâs yours. Â
Opener âAnxietyâ articulates that tension: clattering sounds drift into focus, bouncing and echoing off one another until one bone-shattering moment when the full band strikes at once, moving from something untouchable to get to something deeply felt. âMonotonyâ moves at a narcoleptic pace by Preoccupationsâ standards, but snaps to attention to make its point, that âthis repetitionâs killing you // itâs killing everyone.â  âStimulationâ opens with a snarl and hurls itself forward at what feels like a million bpm, pausing for one mortal moment of relief before barreling onward. âDegradedâ surprises, with something like a traditional structure and an almost pop-leaning melody to its chorus, twisting the bigness of Preoccupationsâ music to sideswipe the clear, finite smallness of its subjects and events. And the 11-minute-long âMemoryâ is the albumâs keystone, with an intimate narrative and a truly timeless post-punk center. Thereâs love piercing through the iciness here, fighting its way forward in each of the songâs distinct sections.Â
As always, there is something crystalline to what theyâve made, a blast of cold air in a burning hot place. All this adds up to Preoccupations: a singular, bracing collection that proves whatâs punishing can also be soothing, everything can change without disrupting your compass. Your best year can be your worst year at the same time.  Whatever sends you flying can also help you land.





















