SANGUINE HUM
A Trace Of Memory BAD ELEPHANT MUSIC
Oxford outfit’s fifth studio album is a real hummer.
Some bands seem to occupy their own pocket universe, exploring a sound so uniquely their own that it seems largely impervious to external factors. Of course, Sanguine Hum could be described as belonging somewhere within the Canterbury-related wing of progressive rock, and while it’s true there’s a certain whimsical, self-deprecating quality discernible within their music that chimes in with that particular generic bell, do they really sound like a knockoff Caravan, Gong or any other stalwarts from that scene? Ultimately, such classifications don’t matter, not when you’re dealing with an album that can only really be best judged against its own discography.