Album Review: Cloud Nothings

cloud-nothings.jpg

CLOUD NOTHINGS
Cloud Nothings
(Carpark)

By the sound of things, you’d never guess that Dylan Baldi — the 19-year-old Westlake native who records as Cloud Nothings — made his full-length debut in a real studio. After recording a series of low-fi singles and a buzzed-about EP in his parents’ basement, Baldi spent a few weeks in a Baltimore studio making Cloud Nothings. And it sounds a lot like his earlier records: no polish, no gloss, and few signs that the album wasn’t laid down in one whirlwind half-hour session. The 11-song Cloud Nothings (which whizzes by in 27 minutes) is part Guided by Voices low-fi fuzz, part Wavves DYI indie pop, both filtered through a hyperactive teen who has a lot to say and not much time to say it in. “Understand It All” and “Should Have” are indie-rock spurts that nearly rupture under the pressure of Baldi’s restlessness. There’s more fury (the rapid-fire “Not Important” is almost punk) and pop (“Forget You All the Time” could be a lost indie-rock gem from the ’80s) than before. And more discipline. It’s the sound of Cleveland’s best one-man band finding his voice. —Michael Gallucci

About The Author

Scroll to read more Music News articles

Newsletters

Join Cleveland Scene Newsletters

Subscribe now to get the latest news delivered right to your inbox.