The name is a misnomer. Glasgow doesn’t experience sunny weather ever. Every day has gloom and despair along the UK ’s answer to Newark , New Jersey . In case this doesn’t give you a good enough idea of the level of industrialization, they actually have tours so you can see the vibrant factories.
Sun is all over this record from the moment it begins with “Wake up Pretty”. Musically, it is heavily indebted to early shoegaze. Great portions of it remind me of “So Tough” the Saint Etienne album from 1993, updated for the modern era. “No. 6 Von Karman Street ” gives evidence of this. Since that album happens to be a favorite of mine, this one immediately won me over.
Each song has its fair share of off-putting studio effects, loud noise, and long ambient stretches. Songs that start out as straightforward rock delve into noisy excursions like “Things Only I can See” which starts out gentle before going insane. “C’mon” would probably be the single from the album if Sunny decided to avoid the shrieking feedback. Giddy and happy, the rhythm moves drunkenly towards pure bliss.
In case this isn’t enough, you can play the album in any order basically. At the end you get “The Best Summer Ever” which probably is the most fitting ending to the album I can think of. The lyrics are almost decipherable, but still under enough distortion that you just miss it. It leaves things off on the happiest of notes.
Personally, this works so much better for me than the more scattershot “Ashes Grammar”.