{"product_id":"glissandro-70_g70-2-bones-of-dundasa-vinyle-180gr_2026_mdl","title":"G70 2: Bones Of Dundasa - Vinyle 180Gr","description":"Twenty years after their self-titled debut, Glissandro 70's second opus exists at the crossroads of album and archive. Composed of a decade of abandoned recordings, lost to a hard drive crash, retrieved as raw stereo mixes, re-evaluated with time, then restored, enhanced, and sublimated, they are finally seeing the light of day. Glissandro 70's mesmerizing mechanics are best understood through the dissonance of the two members' respective approaches as solo artists and bandleaders. Craig Dunsmuir, a true musical encyclopedia and Toronto record store owner for twenty years, leads the Dun-Dun Band, a group drawing inspiration from the world of three great rock names (Fela, Philip, and Pharaoh). Though inspired by math-rock, G70's tasty riffs, composed by Dunsmuir, don't seek to aestheticize complexity or bother the listener with the notion of 13\/8. The rhythm rather materializes as a simple component of the riff, sharing more with afrobeat, another source of inspiration for Dunsmuir. Sandro Perri, a true studio beast, could be Toronto's Caetano Veloso, creating expansive and luxuriant tracks of quixotic beauty, whose textural virtuosity and joy of repetition transform pop music into sound sculpture. Together, they complement each other wonderfully, and Glissandro 70 is also influenced by the convergence of their respective alternative electronic projects, Kanada 70 and Off World. On G70 2: Bones Of Dundasa, Dunsmuir plays the role of riff arbiter, while Perri takes on that of jester, destabilizing \"stubborn ostinatos\" with his characteristic textural tics, his mix, and his dub interventions. In 2016, Dunsmuir emailed Perri to suggest they meet for a drink. Perri told him it was a good idea, as he had something to announce. At the bar, Dunsmuir dropped a bombshell: those recordings they had been working on for the past few years… well, he had had doubts and wanted to shelve them. Perri then dropped another bombshell: he had accidentally deleted those same recordings during a computer update. Perri eventually found raw stereo mixes on another hard drive. When the lockdowns began, he started sifting through his old recordings, but it wasn't until 2024 that he listened to the mixes again. \"Time had sublimated them. So I thought to myself: maybe this is the time to try and make something of them.\" Dunsmuir was game, and the two set about preparing the material for release. The album opens on familiar ground with an expansive version of Arthur Russell's \"Lucky Cloud.\" Dunsmuir trades the dark atmosphere of the original for a vocal of poignant vulnerability, halfway between Rick White and Lou Barlow. Trombonist Peter Zummo, collaborator","brand":"Glissandro 70","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":56870327353688,"sku":null,"price":23931185.0,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0898\/4943\/0360\/files\/0666561019211.jpg?v=1775682474","url":"https:\/\/vinyles.com\/en-us\/products\/glissandro-70_g70-2-bones-of-dundasa-vinyle-180gr_2026_mdl","provider":"Vinyles.com","version":"1.0","type":"link"}