Purity Ring 'WOMB' Unleashes Savage Victorious and Super Dark New Album

Unpretentious trials pay off on Purity Ring's shocking, grotesque third collection

Canadian witchhouse duo Megan James and Corin Roddick discharged their introduction collection 'Shrine' eight years back, and their strong vision was striking from the beginning. Merging uneasing, restless beats with dreadful symbolism, it was a shocking, skittering creation made so excellently.

Expressively, it delineated dismembered bodies ('Fineshrine') and fantasy ish insidious grandmas penetrating little gaps into eyelids. Immaculateness Ring in six words: horrifying symbolism encompassed in entrancing electronica.

It's a recipe that their 2015 follow-up 'Another Eternity' generally stayed with, as well – however that subsequent record felt progressively idealistic. After five years, 'WOMB' possesses this equivalent world again – yet heightened. In spite of the fact that Purity Ring draw you in with delicate edged washes of tune, James' pictures are frequently profoundly explicit and typically agitating.

A progression of contorted love melodies – proclaiming captivation through divided collarbones, pouring blood – and translucent skin held tight over a light, it's physical and masochistic.

“If I could I would let you see through me,”she sings sweetly on opener 'rubyinsides', ‘Hold our skin over the light to hold the heat/Flood the halls with ruby insides til we spill.”

James as of late disclosed to The Skinny that a considerable lot of her verses investigate “my take on how women and non-binary people struggle for power within the patriarchy in an intimate way.”

'Femia', which gestures back to the moderation of the teams' introduction, streams like a sort of reverential psalm. Composed after the passing of James' auntie, it's a gentler rumination on life tumbling through the ages.

“Until the tears run dry, until you cannot breathe,” she sings, “Over the hills where I too someday will leave.” 'Sinew' likewise takes advantage of a gentler tone of obscurity. all heavy, engineered strings, soggy hair and unusually purifying perspiration, it's both peculiar and strangely inspiring.

'Almanac', which manages destiny, feels somewhat exhausted and tedious, yet other than that the slips up are not many. Rather than taking a fight hatchet to what preceded, 'WOMB' refines Purity Ring significantly further. The inconspicuous analyses pay off – regardless of whether you may some of the time wish they'd shock you more.

 
 

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