Sukilove
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Sukilove
- You Kill Me (AHA!068)
CD $10.00 
On You Kill Me listeners will find the catharsis
that deserve to make this Belgian band a household name
on two continents! Pascal Deweze (Chitlin'
Fooks, Shadowgraphic City, Metal Molly, Mitsoobishy
Jacson, Nemo - he's also played on albums by
Bettie Serveert and Alex Chilton) and his band have
loaded up their keen ability to craft pop songs and wheeled
their amplifiers over to the dark side of the nightclub.
You Kill Me showcases building melodies, swelling
arrangements, a driving undercurrent, and pure tension-release
expertly recorded in studios in the US and The Netherlands
and produced by John Morand (Sparklehorse, Labradford,
Cracker, Camper Van Beethoven, etc.). Dense production,
a wall of sound, and Pascal's wonderful songwriting and
acute wit prove You Kill Me to be a stupendous
new album!! The album is - for lack of a better phrase
- far more Lennon than McCartney this time out. While
still melodic and well-sung, there seems to be a lot more
upheaval in these tunes; less like Wilco's
pop adventurism and more like Franz
Ferdinand deciphering Radiohead's
rock experimentalism or channeling an angry, young Elvis
Costello. Yes, this is the type of record for which
NME should be writing 2 page reviews. Great lyrics
spilled over dark, driving, brilliant music (that
doesn't skimp on the hooks!) from a band led by a
tremendous songwriter, inspired performer, and one helluva
guy. Let the music do the talking and try to pin down
your favorite song. I simply adore 3 or 4 songs here and
it’s tough to choose a favorite, when they're ALL
favorites! These guys kill me. Aces!
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Sukilove
- Sukilove (AHA!055)
CD $10.00 
This is a great disc that's fills the musical void masterfully,
equally at home beside your best Palace and Wilco, Roddy
Frame and Ron Sexsmith albums and Promise Ring's "Wood/Water"
and most twilight Tom Waits as well as homespun Swedes
Hederos
& Hellberg and Nicolai Dunger, and melody makers
Squeeze with plenty of hooks and heartfelt, clever lyrics.
All things to all listeners, like the comfort of a good
friend, this album should appeal to a very wide spectrum
of the Parasol audience. The terrific video to the standout
track, "As Long As I Survive Tonight." is now
viewable on our website. Watch
the video and I dare you not to fall in love with
this album. Guests include Carol Van Dyk (Bettie
Serveert/Chitlin
Fooks). |
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Sukilove
- Talking In the Dark (AHA!037)
CD $9.50 
Pascal Deweze, one-half of the CHITLIN'
FOOKS (Carol Van Dyk/Bettie
Serveert) duo, introduces his own band with this debut
mini-album, featuring the folky boot scuff of classic
Americana burnished with the candlelit essence of modern
soft pop. |
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| Compilations |
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Various
- Stuck In the Chimney (More Christmas
Singles) (PAR-CD-074)
CD $7.50 
Includes the Sukilove track "X-Mas For Aliens" |
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Various
- Parasol's Sweet Sixteen Volume 5
(PAR-PROMO-005)
CD $5.00

Includes the Sukilove track "Talking In the Dark" |
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Various
- Parasol's Sweet Sixteen Volume 7 (PAR-PROMO-007)
CD $5.00

Includes the Sukilove track "As Long As I Survive
Tonight" |
See
also: Chitlin'
Fooks, Bettie
Serveert

“Not everyone hated Wings. Belgian pop aficionado Pascal
Deweze's first album under the moniker Sukilove features
swooning, painfully pretty pop built around simple melodies
strummed out on acoustic
guitar and augmented with strings, piano, organs and horns.
This construction allows tracks like "Computing Beauty" and "Talking
in the Dark" to
be both grand and grounded. And Deweze's easygoing voice
takes the desperate edge off otherwise melancholy tunes like "Hang
On" and the bluesy
epic "Did You Ever Feel So Lonely?" There's little
here as gritty as Deweze's work with Chitlin' Fooks, his
twangy outfit with Bettie Serveert's Carol Van Dyk, but there's
also nothing here that's saccharine mush -- which is
more than could be said for Wings' catalog.” -RollingStone.com
"...an album that shines with “Sgt. Pepper"-era
Beatles and “Yankee Hotel Foxtrot" Wilco arrangements.
The disc sports loopy psychedelia, folk fanfares and rustic
country floating through a symphony of well crafted pop.
Nothing's trendy, and there's no eye toward top-40 action.
There's just a singer/songwriter and empathetic musicians
who have
more tricks up their musical sleeves than a sleight of hand
magician. And their output is pure magic.” The
Virginian
“Belgian singer/songwriter Pascal Deweze's second release
as Sukilove is a sophisticated, accomplished collection --
pinches of Wings and Big Star, combined with sprinkles of
early Wilco, make for a pleasant, nearly flawless disc. Moments
throughout the entire album nod to other artists' material,
but Deweze never comes off as a transparent mimic -- he simply
has a firm grasp on what it takes to make a good pop album
and
isn't afraid to reuse ingredients. The album's emotional
peak comes smack in the middle, with the effectively repetitive "Did
You Ever Feel So Lonely". It begins as a stripped-down,
brooding indulgence, but gradually builds in tension with
the subtly-layered addition of slide guitar, piano, backing
vocals,
strings and electronic effluvia until the song finally hits
a climactic, crashing swing. If you'd doubted Deweze's understanding
of intelligently-plotted songwriting, you'll doubt no more… Deweze
is a solid and confident songwriter. He knows when to really
push a song ("Shame
You Never Worry") and when bells and whistles are unnecessary
("Talking
in the Dark", "Just a Lazy Day"). He wears
more than a few influences on his sleeve, but his effortless
distillation of pop knowledge results in a strong, enjoyable
album.” Splendid
e-Zine

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