
Mandy, Indiana - URGH LP NEW
Mandy, Indiana - URGH LP
NEW. SEALED.
Sacred Bones Records
For Mandy, Indiana, the truth is the only way through. On their Sacred Bones debut URGH, the four-piece â vocalist Valentine Caulfield, guitarist and producer Scott Fair, synth player Simon Catling, and drummer Alex Macdougall â are a force of uncanny nature, grafting together a record that is as much a call to action as a parlay into oblivion and transcendence. Across the ten tracks, the band interpolate their own unconventional language into a mantra for self-determination and resilience, forging a template for a brighter future before it fades to black. Â Much of the album was written during a residency at an eerie studio house in the outskirts of Leeds, then recorded across Berlin and Greater Manchester. It was an intense environment partially due to the health issues faced by Caulfield and Macdougall during the writing and recording process. Â Yet Mandy, Indiana remain uncompromising. Caulfield uses her voice as a distorted instrument and a weapon, oscillating between playful and eviscerating. The throbbing siren-sound of âMagazineâ stands alongside the cut-up vocal fry of âtry sayingâ and the shapeshifting ferocity of âist halt so,â which channels the urgency of protest movements, referencing resistance to the genocide in Gaza while speaking to struggles more broadly, while final track âIâll Ask Herâ is a deliberate directness calling out toxic boyâs club culture and a tenacious reckoning that hangs over the album at large. Â Although there are still undeniable âbangersâ (like the frazzled rap of âSicko!â featuring billy woods), URGH often feels hewn with precise cinema. From the bristling techno of âCursiveâ to the deconstructed feedback loops of âLife Hex,â the album moves between industrial catharsis and cinematic unease, threading a tension that Fair describes as âa remix of itself.â This contrasting palette is both a necessary aspect of the record as well as the underlying connective tissue. Â Though deeply personal, URGH reflects the violent, fractured state of the wider world. Caulfieldâs lyrics grapple with assault, systemic indifference, and the omnipresence of pain, while also insisting on moments of beauty and solidarity. URGH belongs in the physical world, and the artwork by Carnovsky, featuring an anatomical illustration of Andreas Vesalius, underscores the recordâs visceral confrontation with the body and its limits. Â URGH is both otherworldly, and physical and cathartic, both a first step toward healing and a refusal to let the conversation die.
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Mandy, Indiana - URGH LP
NEW. SEALED.
Sacred Bones Records
For Mandy, Indiana, the truth is the only way through. On their Sacred Bones debut URGH, the four-piece â vocalist Valentine Caulfield, guitarist and producer Scott Fair, synth player Simon Catling, and drummer Alex Macdougall â are a force of uncanny nature, grafting together a record that is as much a call to action as a parlay into oblivion and transcendence. Across the ten tracks, the band interpolate their own unconventional language into a mantra for self-determination and resilience, forging a template for a brighter future before it fades to black. Â Much of the album was written during a residency at an eerie studio house in the outskirts of Leeds, then recorded across Berlin and Greater Manchester. It was an intense environment partially due to the health issues faced by Caulfield and Macdougall during the writing and recording process. Â Yet Mandy, Indiana remain uncompromising. Caulfield uses her voice as a distorted instrument and a weapon, oscillating between playful and eviscerating. The throbbing siren-sound of âMagazineâ stands alongside the cut-up vocal fry of âtry sayingâ and the shapeshifting ferocity of âist halt so,â which channels the urgency of protest movements, referencing resistance to the genocide in Gaza while speaking to struggles more broadly, while final track âIâll Ask Herâ is a deliberate directness calling out toxic boyâs club culture and a tenacious reckoning that hangs over the album at large. Â Although there are still undeniable âbangersâ (like the frazzled rap of âSicko!â featuring billy woods), URGH often feels hewn with precise cinema. From the bristling techno of âCursiveâ to the deconstructed feedback loops of âLife Hex,â the album moves between industrial catharsis and cinematic unease, threading a tension that Fair describes as âa remix of itself.â This contrasting palette is both a necessary aspect of the record as well as the underlying connective tissue. Â Though deeply personal, URGH reflects the violent, fractured state of the wider world. Caulfieldâs lyrics grapple with assault, systemic indifference, and the omnipresence of pain, while also insisting on moments of beauty and solidarity. URGH belongs in the physical world, and the artwork by Carnovsky, featuring an anatomical illustration of Andreas Vesalius, underscores the recordâs visceral confrontation with the body and its limits. Â URGH is both otherworldly, and physical and cathartic, both a first step toward healing and a refusal to let the conversation die.












