#14 on the 2024 Bacon Top 31 — Sunset Rubdown
Always Happy to Explode by Sunset Rubdown
I have an infatuation with Spencer Krug, the principal songwriter, lead vocalist, and creative force behind Sunset Rubdown, whose fifth album Always Happy to Explode has risen with a bullet all the way up to #14 on my Top 31 of 2024. If you don’t recognize Krug’s name, you’ll probably recognize his voice. Go ahead and hit play on the video above, for the song “Reappearing Rat.”
My infatuation with the man is plain as day: I’ve written about Krug numerous times, thanks to his efforts as half of the singing/songwriting of Wolf Parade, as well as his solo-ish work as Moonface. Those two Krug projects have appeared on my Top 31 six times: #17 in 2010, #27 in 2011, #23 in 2013, #14 in 2017, #31 in 2018, and #26 in 2020.
Krug, 47, from Penticton, British Columbia, first hit my radar on Wolf Parade’s 2005 album Apologies to the Queen Mary, and I loved Sunset Rubdown’s 2006 and 2007 albums, Shut Up I Am Dreaming and Random Spirit Lover, respectively, as well as Wolf Parade’s 2008 album At Mount Zoomer. In my inaugural year of Top 31s (2009) I somehow missed Sunset Rubdown’s album Dragonslayer, but nearly every other album release that Krug has been a part of in the ensuing years has ended up in my Top 31 (his three true solo albums released in the Covid years 2021-2023 barely missed the cut as well).
His voice is entirely unique, unlike any other singer you’ll hear. While I can’t define his voice by saying that he sounds like any other singer, it’s easier to compare his voice to the not-unpleasant sound of a cat whose tail has been stepped on. (The sound of his voice is not-unpleasant, but I’m sure the cat whose tail gets stepped on feels much different). And in case you couldn’t tell from the wealth of albums and bands mentioned above, the man is prolific. He’s been a part of 26 album releases since 2002, an average of more than one album a year – not the same pace as King Gizzard, but he’s close.
This great new Sunset Rubdown record, Always Happy to Explode, is coming at us a full 15 years after the previous Sunset Rubdown album. When they released Dragonslayer in 2009, they soon thereafter disbanded quietly. No official announcement, but also no hint of anything new coming out. Of course Krug had his many other alternative creative outlets he was able to tap into in the ensuing years, with no real reason to go back to the Sunset Rubdown well. But then, according to Wikipedia, Krug had a dream in which a reunion with the band did happen and it was enjoyable. So he acted on that dream, called up his previous bandmates, and together they decided to put a tour together, because why not? That was 2023.
From the success of that tour came the drive to record together. Krug has maintained a Patreon account since 2019, where he releases a newly-written song every month. From those songs, the Sunset Rubdown crew chose nine songs to recombine and rework and record, and thus we now have a fantastic new Sunset Rubdown record.
It must be magical to be in Spencer Krug’s creative circle. To be given a call, out of the blue, to suggest you join him on tour, have a great time, and then, hey, let’s get in the studio and remake some of these 60 songs I’ve self-released over the last five years. I want to be in that circle, but I’m no musician. So I’ll gladly take all the creativity he puts out into the world and consume it with fervor. I don’t yet subscribe the Patreon, but I’m about to change that. He’s given me lots of joy over the last 23 years, and it’s the least I can do to repay him. That, and gushing about him here on The Bacon Review. Enjoy the music!
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- Songs Of A Lost World by The Cure
- TANGK by IDLES
- My Method Actor by Nilüfer Yanya
- Alligator Bites Never Heal by Doechii
- No Name by Jack White
- Flight b741 by King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard
- As It Ever Was, So It Will Be Again by The Decemberists
- Cutouts and Wall of Eyes by The Smile
- Below a Massive Dark Land by Naima Bock
- Mahashmashana by Father John Misty
- Strawberry Hotel by Underworld
- Faith Crisis Pt 1 by Middle Kids
- Romance by Fontaines D.C.
- Here in the Pitch by Jessica Pratt
- Brand On The Run / Our Brand Could Be Yr Life by BODEGA
- People Who Aren’t There Anymore by Future Islands
- White Roses, My God by Alan Sparhawk
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