Hello fellow Sorry Staters! Another week, another pick! We have loads of new releases that came out this past week and even more in the weeks to come! For the month of July, I am going to do something a bit different with this platform. I am going to go through one of my favorite genres, shoegaze/dreampop, and just chat about a few of my favorite albums in the genre. I fell in love with shoegaze through a lot of newer bands such as Whirr, They Are Gutting a Body of Water and Full Body 2.
The first album I’m going to talk about this month is Drop Nineteen’s Delaware. Released in 1992, it captures the essence of the genre with its swirling and reverberated guitars, dreamy vocals, and layered soundscapes by using a myriad of effects pedals. The band went through a lineup change after this album, but couldn’t get it quite right after they released this juggernaut of a record. A little fact about the cover art of this record, the image of a girl holding a gun was replaced by a flower on the 2024 reissues of the album due to the amount of gun violence in the United States. The band donated a portion of the sales to the Artist for Action charity.
This record is often praised for its production, which balances the raw energy and attitude of alternative rock that was done so well in the 90s, with the textured layers typical of shoegaze. The album remains cohesive throughout while exploring different sonic landscapes, from the more upbeat sounds in the song Angel to the more melancholic song like Kick the Tragedy.
This album is a must have for anyone exploring the genre and looking for an album reminiscent of 90s alternative rock and shoegaze as a newer exploratory sound at that time.