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(Self-released, digital) I wonder how many records were made because someone went west to find better fishing? I m going to go out on a limb and say
one. There s an album that happened specifically because a fisherman, who is also an indie-rock musician, felt like hunting the icy waters off the Alaskan coast. (Note to anyone thinking of sending me a Jimmy Buffett record: 1.
Gross. 2. Even if he did go fishing in Alaska and wrote a song called King Crabs Got Me Down, it doesn t count. Don t @ me.) That musician is Burlington s Tristan Baribeau. Way back in 2013, the songwriter, who also played with indie rockers Villanelles, made the trek out west in search of a better haul. Between his fishing trips and visits home, Baribeau recorded seven songs chronicling his various experiences, mishaps and oscillating emotions.
Cheapbabyy27 instantly evokes visions of an alien spacecraft descending to Earth. The ship s titanium-alloy entrance ramp extends downward into billows of vanilla vapor. The Burlington band s front person, synthist, songwriter and
likely alien explorer, Zack Schuster, glides out of the craft as if floating. LEDs trim their iridescent spacesuit. Gigantic speakers pop open from compartments all over the ship, blasting the throbbing, four-on-the-floor grind of opener Rollerblading. Humanity is destined to twitch and pulse to the unrelenting dance beats. At least that s what comes to mind in the gurgling first moments of the newly released EP. Schuster, who uses gender-neutral pronouns, is a club kid through and through. They have released post-punk and dance music under the moniker Roost for a few years and recently changed it to Roost.World to differentiate from other bands with the same name. In Vermont, though, the group can be called simply Roost.