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Nearly two decades after their 2007 debut and a 2010–2022 hiatus, Austin, TX’s Voxtrot return with Dreamers in Exile, a new LP that turns an underdog story into a true second act.
The band who quietly became cult heroes in the streaming era deliver a record that carries the electric rush longtime fans remember while speaking directly to the new generation of youth who discovered them through playlists and word of mouth.
Musically, Dreamers in Exile folds Voxtrot’s classic DNA—C86 sparkle, Sarah Records romanticism, the pulse of <a href="spotify:artist:1nJvji2KIlWSseXRSlNYsC" data-name="The Velvet Underground">The Velvet Underground</a>, the elegance of <a href="spotify:artist:3BqAAo5E60L15TcFgWI8xH" data-name="Felt">Felt</a>—into a sharper, more confident sound.
Guitars chime and sprint, rhythms push forward, and <a href="spotify:artist:623PGEmEOo2GBHPUDkgfjq" data-name="Ramesh">Ramesh</a> Srivastava’s literate, heart-forward lyrics trace the distance between youth and maturity, exile and home, regret and renewal. Mixed by Dean Reid (<a href="spotify:artist:00FQb4jTyendYWaN8pK0wa" data-name="Lana Del Rey">Lana Del Rey</a>, <a href="spotify:artist:53KwLdlmrlCelAZMaLVZqU" data-name="James Blake">James Blake</a>), it reads as both reintroduction and redemption.
For a band born of the 2000s blog wave alongside <a href="spotify:artist:5BvJzeQpmsdsFp4HGUYUEx" data-name="Vampire Weekend">Vampire Weekend</a>, <a href="spotify:artist:2cCUtGK9sDU2EoElnk0GNB" data-name="The National">The National</a> and <a href="spotify:artist:2Jv5eshHtLycR6R8KQCdc4" data-name="Grizzly Bear">Grizzly Bear</a>, Dreamers in Exile is less nostalgia than proof of life. It’s the sound of a beloved group returning on their own terms and finding their songs resonating more widely than ever.
The band who quietly became cult heroes in the streaming era deliver a record that carries the electric rush longtime fans remember while speaking directly to the new generation of youth who discovered them through playlists and word of mouth.
Musically, Dreamers in Exile folds Voxtrot’s classic DNA—C86 sparkle, Sarah Records romanticism, the pulse of <a href="spotify:artist:1nJvji2KIlWSseXRSlNYsC" data-name="The Velvet Underground">The Velvet Underground</a>, the elegance of <a href="spotify:artist:3BqAAo5E60L15TcFgWI8xH" data-name="Felt">Felt</a>—into a sharper, more confident sound.
Guitars chime and sprint, rhythms push forward, and <a href="spotify:artist:623PGEmEOo2GBHPUDkgfjq" data-name="Ramesh">Ramesh</a> Srivastava’s literate, heart-forward lyrics trace the distance between youth and maturity, exile and home, regret and renewal. Mixed by Dean Reid (<a href="spotify:artist:00FQb4jTyendYWaN8pK0wa" data-name="Lana Del Rey">Lana Del Rey</a>, <a href="spotify:artist:53KwLdlmrlCelAZMaLVZqU" data-name="James Blake">James Blake</a>), it reads as both reintroduction and redemption.
For a band born of the 2000s blog wave alongside <a href="spotify:artist:5BvJzeQpmsdsFp4HGUYUEx" data-name="Vampire Weekend">Vampire Weekend</a>, <a href="spotify:artist:2cCUtGK9sDU2EoElnk0GNB" data-name="The National">The National</a> and <a href="spotify:artist:2Jv5eshHtLycR6R8KQCdc4" data-name="Grizzly Bear">Grizzly Bear</a>, Dreamers in Exile is less nostalgia than proof of life. It’s the sound of a beloved group returning on their own terms and finding their songs resonating more widely than ever.
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