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The WireJun 15, 2022Armed with limited instrumentation and Knapp’s understated vocal, the album’s seven tracks take on a form of storytelling, made alive with synthesized fluttering bat wings, bouts of sax squall and sinewy electronic backbeats. [Jul 2022, p.53]
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UncutJun 14, 2022Deliluh are more economical on their third album, even if they regularly expand on its mix of Kyle Knapp’s intimidatingly recited, enigmatic lyrics and angular post-punk. [Jul 2022, p.25]
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Jun 14, 2022When Knapp and Pederson get it right, which they mostly do, especially on the first three tracks, it’s a joy to listen to. However, when it doesn’t quite work it can be a bit of a slog. Saying that when it does all come together ‘Fault Lines’ is exceptional and shows that Knapp and Pederson still have plenty to say.
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Jun 14, 2022While Fault Lines sees the transitory Deliluh maintain their hankering for neurotic storytelling and bleak narration, they've tapped into an arcane musical world of enveloping darkness predestined for a band that was bound to take their scene by storm before global pandemonium ensued.
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Jun 14, 2022While tracks like “Credence (Ash in the Winds of Reason)” and “Syndicate II” fit snugly into the band’s previous guitar-driven repertoire (not to mention this current era of peak post-punk), Deliluh are the rare band that can summon the menacing propulsion and imagistic density of the Fall without resorting to Mark E. Smith pantomime-uh.