With The Moth, Cancer House achieve something rare: the album modernises the language of slowcore and post-rock without sounding like a historical style exercise. The still little-known Chicago quartet dispenses with the genre’s typical heaviness. Instead, it relies on reduced, fragile sounds, muted dynamics and an almost anonymous ensemble sound, in which individual signatures are subordinated to the collective.
This approach is already evident in the intro »Camera Obscura«: the delayed guitars, brushed drums and ghostly vocal echoes do not open a space so much as a vulnerable state of suspension, in which every detail carries weight. »Flowers Over There« shows this even more precisely, with detuned loops that do not form a shimmering surface but serve as the piece’s guiding thread. The swelling arc holds back sonically, and feels all the sharper for it.
A trace of sadness and deep seriousness runs through the album. With this deliberately emotional soundscape, which feels familiar from the start, The Moth is especially convincing. A post-rock album that knows its history, but tests every gesture for its emotional necessity. Beauty in darkness.

The Moth