Broken Heart Surgery
Label: Discreet Music
Genre: Experimental, Highlights, Indie Rock
$36.99
Out of stock
Audiopile Review: After an incredible run of 11 full length albums all issued on Simon Joyner’s Grapefruit Records, the NZ underground master of gloomy guitar dirges lands with ease on Discreet Records, who have reached out of their usual stable of Gothenburg experimentalists for this special release. The pairing is a beshert one, as there can be no doubt that Montgomery, through his decades of solo work, as well as his time in art-damaged post-punk outfits Dadamah and The Pin Group, has certainly had an effect on the Gothenburg scene at large. Broken Heart Surgery follows the same collaborative formula as 2018’s Suffuse, which featured guest vocalists like Haley Fohr (Circuit Des Yeux), Liz Harris (Grouper), Julianna Barwick and Katie von Schleicher. These new pairings, largely from lesser known vocalists sourced from across New Zealand and elsewhere, bring their ethereal vocal styles to Montgomery’s signature of canyon-deep and reverb-laced guitar tone, the album landing somewhere between the gauzy melancholia of early Cocteau Twins, the somnambulant drift of Flying Saucer Attack and the pretty gothic majesty of those early Angels of Light albums. One of his best in this incredible run that shows no signs of abating. Edition of 500, imported direct from the source in Gothenburg!
Discreet have finally whispered the right sweet nothings and at last tied down The Greatest Living Guitarist for a brand new long player of elegiac bliss. Roy Montgomery has been on some hot streak the past half decade or so, having issued a mind blowing ten albums in seven years for Grapefruit, four of which came in the same calendar year back in 2021. And yet somehow, the well fails to run dry. Amidst this frankly superhuman surge of activity, Broken Hearted Surgery is notable for showcasing the collaborative side of Montgomery’s output, joined here by six different vocalists (aka ‘friends’), half of which recorded with him in Christchurch, the other half remotely. Regardless of locale or contributor, the sound remains overtly that of Mongomery, that same trademark open-ended guitar tone that finds a unique space between the dreampop melancholy of classic era 4AD, a subtle rendering of Gottsching’s komische overdrive and Mark Hollis minimalism. In its own way, this is music as ecstatic as any late period-Swans, and when you hear Montgomery’s low-slung vocals intersect with the more ethereal tones of one of his collaborators, it’s as emotionally elemental as Gira at his most vulnerable. There’s few Roy Montgomery records I wouldn’t vouch for, though Broken Hearted Friends does seem to more clearly harken back to Dadamah than other recent output, and as such scratches a few otherwise unreachable itches. And you know what, people should talk of the ‘Montgomery Sound’ in the way they do that of 4AD, a marbled swirl of ineffable rapture, romantic and doomed and eternal. New Zealand has its Sistine Chapel, and Roy’s just added a new annex.