David Nance & Mowed Sound Debut New Album On Third Man Records : 2/9
Omaha, Nebraska legend David Nance has been creating music for a numbers years now. With various bands/projects such as Astute Palate, Buildermash, The Forbidden Tigers and his frequent collaborator, the great Simon Joyner, Nance has been a productive machine of creativity and prolific mastery for some time now. Releasing a wide range of genre bending material on labels like Unread, Grapefruit Records and Ba Da Bing!, Nance is a heavy force of planetary alignment, anatomical tone sedation and country “free-for-all”. A magician of vacationed vibe and vice that explores bountiful boundaries of fruitful feedback, rational rejection of the senses and solstice structures all coexisting together in some snowy pasture in the middle of the US. With previous tiles such as “Staunch Honey”, “More Than Enough”, “Lush Bruises Suck Rice and Barley”, “Pulverized And Slightly Peaced” and “Let’s Argue”, Nance consistently demonstrates his prehistoric 'Young-ian’ celebration and cold western hallucinations across multiples platforms and mediums in his music.
Abducted visions of harmony and watered down drama, Nance has followed up 2022’s “Mowed Sound Vol. 1”, but this time working alongside the fine folks over at Third Man Records to give this much needed outfit the attention and support it deserves. Working with local legend Dereck Higgins, a decorated veteran who is behind bands/projects such as Digital Sex, Son, Ambulance, and DVH Recordings, the two are in perfect harmony as the conquer the static weather of dystopian emotion and cataclysmic content. Set for release on February the 9th, David Nance & Mowed Sound are a blistering narrative of isolation in bliss and weathered headspace(s) all transitioning and inspiring the intensity of being a person. With ten holy tracks stretching across the common wax, Nance expresses a total sense of wonder and bewilderment for his audience. With tracks such as the single “Mock the Hour”, “Tumbleweed”, “Credit Line” and closer “In Orlando”, Nance achieves a remarkable balance of melody, narrative anticipation, humble themes of protagonists up against the wall of the world and country contemporary nirvana.