
Musically, Plantoid’s cauldron harnesses multiple subgenres at once to concoct a sort of primordial soup, the molecules of which are built as much from progressive rock as they are jazz, fusion, folk, and even a bit of ‘70s hard rock for good measure. The band began as the brainchild of Chloe and Tom, who formed the band Mangö and started gigging around town with drummer Louis Bradshaw, who Tom had been good friends with since secondary school.
After making a name for themselves locally, the three relocated to London and recruited bassist Bernardo Larisch, who they met at a uni freshers party. Now a four-piece, and renamed Plantoid, the band were ready to dig even deeper into their shared influences, ranging from Miles Davis to Todd Rundgren, to Jeff Buckley, all the way around to the more acute experimental fare that gives Plantoid their razor-sharp edge.
Emotion, whether it be through their music, lyrics, or performances, is a large part of Plantoid’s creative impetus. Think back to that little alien searching for meaning with his big green spaceship: through all the crazy solos, elastic basslines, acrobatic vocals and supermassive drum beats, Terrapath is a story about finding yourself through the music you love.
STAFF COMMENTS
Barry says: I know everyone says that their band are 'hard to categorise', and it is sometimes true. There's no doubt that hugely talented Brighton foursome Plantoid could be chucked in that broad category but it's also clear that their fusion of jagged noise-rock, angular psychedelia and tropical 50's wooze is uniquely brilliant and undeniably catchy. Ace.TRACK LISTING
Side A
Is That You?
Pressure
Modulator
It’s Not Real
Dog’s Life
Side B
Only When I’m Thinking
Wander/Wonder
Insomniac (Don’t Worry)
G.Y. Drift
Softly Speaking