TEST PRESSING: The Whitest Boy Alive Share the First Single From “Rules,” Their Second Platter of Plaintive Disco

Posted on March 13, 2009
Filed Under Media, Test Pressing | 1 Comment

As self-titled told you in a review of their Sydney show last December, the Whitest Boy Alive are the closest we’ve ever come to witnessing a modern-day reincarnation of Arthur Russell. At least in terms of the quartet’s disco leanings and Erlend Øye’s even-handed melodies. That boy’s voice settles our caffeine-wrecked nerves like no other singer in the indie dance realm.

The following s/t premier is from the Whitest Boy Alive’s second LP, Rules, which arrives via the band’s Bubbles imprint on March 31. Like the rest of Rules, “Keep a Secret” was captured in one live take during a relaxed recording session in Mexico. As such, it has a loose, groove-locked sound that taps right into our need for a mid-tempo dance jam on a sunny Friday morning. We’ll have a report on the entire record later this month …

The Whitest Boy Alive, “Keep a Secret”

Bookmark and Share

Comments

One Response to “TEST PRESSING: The Whitest Boy Alive Share the First Single From “Rules,” Their Second Platter of Plaintive Disco”

  1. THE S/T INTERVIEW: Kings of Convenience | self-titled magazine :: s/t daily on September 14th, 2009 3:19 pm

    [...] is surprising because your other band, The Whitest Boy Alive, released two albums in that time span. Erlend: You know how hard it is to get [to the U.S.]. It is [...]

Leave a Reply