Consisting of six songs all sharing the name of the album -- and it's one of the most appropriate titles in a long while --
Black Sleep is a wonderful, mournful fifth album by
Jasper TX, something that is at once a blend of familiar sounds and styles -- guitar textures calling to mind acts ranging from the
Durutti Column to
Roy Montgomery to the
Cocteau Twins to any number of shoegazers and neo-psych acts -- and its own shadowy, contemplative style. With the stark name and cover design setting the mood to begin with, arguably all the one-man act had to do was simply live up to it, but each of the six songs has its own distinct sound and approach; instead of repeating itself, the album takes on new forms as it progresses. The steady progression of a rhythmic note pattern and distant wailing feedback on the second part bears little resemblance to the crumbling, choppy start to the fourth part or the compressed, deep-anchored drones of the fifth. Hearing the conclusion of the third part in this context -- a steady, quietly anthemic chug that sounds almost like an isolated part of a
Mogwai song circa Rock Action -- is monumental, while the spare, minimal echoes of murk and crackle that help end the album on the sixth part further extend the quietly varied impact of
Black Sleep as a whole. ~ Ned Raggett