You need to listen to the brutally oppressive I’ve Seen All I Need to See

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TL;DR

I've Seen All I Need to See is a brutally oppressive album that lacks atmospheric spookiness but compensates with unrelenting intensity, evoking the most violent scenes in bleak horror through distorted instrumentation.

There are only a handful of albums that I think qualify as genuinely scary. You Won't Get What You Want by Daughters, and Swans To Be Kind both immediately come to mind. But those records come with… let's say, baggage. I've Seen All I Need to See lacks some of the atmospheric spookiness of To Be Kind and the flashes of pop-tinged menace of You Won't Get What You Want, but it makes up for that with unrelenting brutality. It's not the soundtrack to a slasher film, it's the most violent scene in the bleakest horror film, rendered as blown-out drums and detuned guitar.

The album opens with a reading of Douglas Dunn's The Kaleidoscope, a poem ab …

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