
The Sound of Yourself
Product Info
Limited LP : Indies Exclusive Pink & Orange Swirl Vinyl
LP : Standard Black Vinyl
More Info
Throughout his career fronting Superchunk and Portastatic, Mac McCaughan has channeled more than his share of angst into a microphone, resulting in undeniable rock anthems. So how can a voice so familiar to others still seem foreign to its owner? On The Sound of Yourself, McCaughanâs second release under his own name, he explores that question fully, shooting his voice through a prism and refracting it across these songs in new and rewarding ways.
In January 2021, McCaughan found himself at his home studio in Chapel Hill North Carolina staring down a clean slate after wrapping a film score and several other music projects. His thought process was simple: âEach day is blurring into the next, so what are we doing today? How can I disrupt this? I think what resulted was a theme of subdued⊠âjoyâ is the wrong word, but itâs at least comforting if not propulsive to have something open-ended to work on every day without any kind of structure or deadline or rules.â McCaughan leaned into allowing randomness and accidents to catalyze his compositions. Where a guitar riff might typically start a Superchunk song, an indistinguishable loop found on an old sampler dictates the mood on âFound Cricket,â and simply opening up his studio to the woods outside channels Another Green World on â36 and Rain.â Instrumentals make up nearly half of The Sound of Yourself, and are integral to the albumâs atmosphere. While the pop-oriented tracks hint at sounds explored on Non-Believers, McCaughanâs recent scoring work and frequent excursions with synthesizers and sequencers (see: the Moogfest commissioned POMS and his ambient project with Mary Lattimore) add a particularly crystalline spaciness akin to The Durutti Column and Bowieâs Berlin trilogy. A sloping new wave bassline grounds the catchy âCircling Aroundâ as McCaughan rejects rumination with cleverly cyclical lyrics and a few strategically placed âwhoaâs. The warbled synthetic voices emanating from the Mellotron on âSleep Donorâ are already singing isolation blues well before McCaughan frets, âI hear a footstep in the hall when there should be no one there at allâŠâ These could be the same ghostly sounds âsofter than the light, under the doorâ he describes in âI Hear a Radio,â a track on which Michael Benjamin Lerner (Telekinesis) and Annie Hayden (Spent) provide shimmering vocal harmonies.
For a record titled The Sound of Yourself, the irony in having many contributions from friends is not lost on McCaughan: âIâm constantly inspired by the work of my peers. I feel lucky to be able to collaborate with them despite the distances between us. Sending off a song into the ether and having it returned greatly improved and in often surprising and moving ways was one of the most satisfying aspects of making this record.â Additional guest appearances include Sabrina Ellis (A Giant Dog, Sweet Spirit), Mackenzie Scott of TORRES, plus three moody saxophone tracks that Matt Douglas of the Mountain Goats offered McCaughan, layered on top of one another. Mary Lattimore introduces and concludes The Sound of Yourself with her singular harp playing. The bittersweet single âDawn Bendsâ is bolstered not only by Superchunk drummer Jon Wurster but the esteemed trio of Yo La Tengo on bass, organ, guitar, and vocals.
The albumâs title track asks, âDo you ever get used to the sound of yourself?â For an artist like Mac McCaughan, the answer lies in experimentationâtesting his voice in a different light, deconstructing it, sometimes relegating it elsewhere or removing it altogether as the piece dictates. He knows that within the creative pursuit of an album as illuminating as The Sound of Yourself, familiarity reveals itself in the unknown.
Tracklist
SIDE A
Moss Light
The Sound of Yourself
I Hear a Radio
36 and Rain
Burn a Fax
SIDE B
Gen Ash
Circling Around
R Dream
Sleep Donor
Dawn Bends
Found Cricket
Soundwave
https://youtu.be/9cH5kTwPpCk
Original: $19.03
-65%$19.03
$6.66Product Information
Product Information
Shipping & Returns
Shipping & Returns
Description
Product Info
Limited LP : Indies Exclusive Pink & Orange Swirl Vinyl
LP : Standard Black Vinyl
More Info
Throughout his career fronting Superchunk and Portastatic, Mac McCaughan has channeled more than his share of angst into a microphone, resulting in undeniable rock anthems. So how can a voice so familiar to others still seem foreign to its owner? On The Sound of Yourself, McCaughanâs second release under his own name, he explores that question fully, shooting his voice through a prism and refracting it across these songs in new and rewarding ways.
In January 2021, McCaughan found himself at his home studio in Chapel Hill North Carolina staring down a clean slate after wrapping a film score and several other music projects. His thought process was simple: âEach day is blurring into the next, so what are we doing today? How can I disrupt this? I think what resulted was a theme of subdued⊠âjoyâ is the wrong word, but itâs at least comforting if not propulsive to have something open-ended to work on every day without any kind of structure or deadline or rules.â McCaughan leaned into allowing randomness and accidents to catalyze his compositions. Where a guitar riff might typically start a Superchunk song, an indistinguishable loop found on an old sampler dictates the mood on âFound Cricket,â and simply opening up his studio to the woods outside channels Another Green World on â36 and Rain.â Instrumentals make up nearly half of The Sound of Yourself, and are integral to the albumâs atmosphere. While the pop-oriented tracks hint at sounds explored on Non-Believers, McCaughanâs recent scoring work and frequent excursions with synthesizers and sequencers (see: the Moogfest commissioned POMS and his ambient project with Mary Lattimore) add a particularly crystalline spaciness akin to The Durutti Column and Bowieâs Berlin trilogy. A sloping new wave bassline grounds the catchy âCircling Aroundâ as McCaughan rejects rumination with cleverly cyclical lyrics and a few strategically placed âwhoaâs. The warbled synthetic voices emanating from the Mellotron on âSleep Donorâ are already singing isolation blues well before McCaughan frets, âI hear a footstep in the hall when there should be no one there at allâŠâ These could be the same ghostly sounds âsofter than the light, under the doorâ he describes in âI Hear a Radio,â a track on which Michael Benjamin Lerner (Telekinesis) and Annie Hayden (Spent) provide shimmering vocal harmonies.
For a record titled The Sound of Yourself, the irony in having many contributions from friends is not lost on McCaughan: âIâm constantly inspired by the work of my peers. I feel lucky to be able to collaborate with them despite the distances between us. Sending off a song into the ether and having it returned greatly improved and in often surprising and moving ways was one of the most satisfying aspects of making this record.â Additional guest appearances include Sabrina Ellis (A Giant Dog, Sweet Spirit), Mackenzie Scott of TORRES, plus three moody saxophone tracks that Matt Douglas of the Mountain Goats offered McCaughan, layered on top of one another. Mary Lattimore introduces and concludes The Sound of Yourself with her singular harp playing. The bittersweet single âDawn Bendsâ is bolstered not only by Superchunk drummer Jon Wurster but the esteemed trio of Yo La Tengo on bass, organ, guitar, and vocals.
The albumâs title track asks, âDo you ever get used to the sound of yourself?â For an artist like Mac McCaughan, the answer lies in experimentationâtesting his voice in a different light, deconstructing it, sometimes relegating it elsewhere or removing it altogether as the piece dictates. He knows that within the creative pursuit of an album as illuminating as The Sound of Yourself, familiarity reveals itself in the unknown.
Tracklist
SIDE A
Moss Light
The Sound of Yourself
I Hear a Radio
36 and Rain
Burn a Fax
SIDE B
Gen Ash
Circling Around
R Dream
Sleep Donor
Dawn Bends
Found Cricket
Soundwave
https://youtu.be/9cH5kTwPpCk














