Loading details…
Loading details…
Artist
Indie psych-rock super group The Voodoo Children started as a conversation about the mystical. Grammy nominated writer/producer JT Daly was riffing in a garage turned gothic church; it's unclear who else was in the room. Visages of other artists spirit in and out of the songs, almost at a whim. With echoes of 60's and 90's shoegaze and lyrics conjuring some ancient forgotten time, The Voodoo Children sound both new and familiar. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.
# Why It Matters This album rewards curious listening because it captures something genuinely uncertain—a conversation about mysticism that refuses easy answers. The production, shaped by Grammy-nominated producer JT Daly, creates a deliberately ambiguous sonic landscape where influences from 60s psychedelia and 90s shoegaze blur together in ways that feel neither nostalgic nor derivative. What's most intriguing is the album's structural openness: the presence of unnamed collaborators and shifting artistic voices throughout suggests the work as a kind of séance, where meaning emerges from collaboration rather than singular vision. The lyrics evoke historical or mythic sensibilities without anchoring themselves to any specific narrative, inviting interpretation rather than