“A mighty and nimble love letter to the world they grew up in”: And So I Watch You From Afar’s Megafauna

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And So I Watch You From Afar have come a long way since they formed in Belfast almost 20 years ago. Their self-titled debut, released via independent Derry label Smalltown America in 2009, proved to be the baby steps on the way to becoming the big beast that they are today. 

What that early release has in common with their seventh release, Megafauna, is their intrinsic understanding conveying emotion without language. And so while they’re routinely labelled post-rock, it’s an oversimplification that does them a disservice.

Megafauna is a tribute to the world they grew up in: Portrush, on the northern coast of Northern Ireland; and Belfast, the capital to the east. It’s an album that came out of lockdown, where they began to take stock of what they’d been missing once they were allowed to reconvene.

AND SO I WATCH YOU FROM AFAR – North Coast Megafauna – Music Video – YouTube AND SO I WATCH YOU FROM AFAR - North Coast Megafauna - Music Video - YouTube

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At the centre is the two-part Mother Belfast, which switches from a noirish intro into Paranoid Android-like peregrinations, before an almost glam rock-like bounce takes the second part up a notch. Perhaps best of all, though, is opener North Coast Megafauna, which is driven by the dazzling interplay of guitars between Rory Friers and Niall Kennedy.

They dance between dexterity and nuance, leaving many of the bands they’re compared to in their wake

Friers calls it a love letter to the North Coast: “Our friends there, the energy, the cold days skateboarding, the long summers in the sea, our beloved music venue, the closeness of it all.”

The track is infused with a playfulness and even a sense of humour, where the lumbering beast suddenly displays bursts of agility and speed, floating like a butterfly, stinging like a bee and tearing across the plain like a giant cheetah.

On songs like the progressively expansive Gallery Of Honour and Me And Dunbar, ASIWYFA express their own language, which they use to dance between dexterity and nuance, transcending genre and leaving many of the bands they’re compared to in their wake.

Their previous release, 2022’s Jettison, was their most ambitious record to date – but as with so many artists, best-laid plans were interrupted by the pandemic, and their most cinematic work suffered through no fault of their own. There’s certainly no licking of the wounds on Megafauna, an album that’s both mighty and nimble at the same time.

Megafauna is on sale now via Pelagic Records.

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