J and the Woolen Stars
Live at No Bounds Festival
28912
/
2026
LP
26.99
28912-3
Pre-Order: Available on / around Jun 12th 2026
Incl. VAT plus shipping / Orders from outside the EU are exempt from VAT
Tracklist
1Hard Heels on a Hardwood Floor 4:44
2You Make Me Weak at the Knees 3:52
3Dirty Like an Angel 2:32
4She Knows Just What to Say 2:59
5You're a Beautiful Girl 3:35
6Keep a Photo of Us in My Purse 6:20
7Today She Brought Me In 3:55
8It Is Never Goodbye 1:50
9Forget Me Not 1:58

New from Ulla’s 28912 label comes a gorgeous bouquet of lowercase wonders from Justin Cantrell aka J and the Woolen Stars.

The fourth release on the label following Naemi’s »Breathless, Shorn« and Ulla’s own »Hometown Girl«, and its »Other Girl« companion piece, »Puff« is a new album from Justin Cantrell aka J and the Woolen Stars, a core member of Naarm’s underground scene as part of local supergroup Picnic, and the brains behind the excellent Daisart and se Dessaisir Publishing labels - we recommend you check in on both if you haven’t already done so. »Puff« is a glistening pool of lush refractions and music-box lullabies, featuring an array of acoustic instruments and fragile foley sounds that are gently peeled away until all we’re left with are the faded outlines of half-remembered songs. A sound that roots itself in the prophetic machinations of artists like Fennesz and the languid Japanese minimalism of Fourcolour or Moskitoo, »Puff« strikes a delicate balance, sounding as bewitchingly informal as a Tenniscoats set, but also consistently muddling the perception of high and low-brow sound. Cantrell’s skill lies in a sort of sonic conjuration, bamboozling the brains of those of us who grew up listening to stepped-on audio via ramshackle RealMedia streams by alchemising the content, turning found sound into gold. Just tell us you don’t get chills from hearing the bitrate-impaired acoustic guitar on »Dirty like an angel«, set against a backdrop of windy, harmonic detritus. It’s both meticulously contrived and gloriously off-the-cuff, like one of Vincent Gallo’s classic »When«-era demos reduced down to 96kbps.

Similarly, »She knows just what to say« provokes faint memories of folk music, with impromptu fiddle parts gently steamrolled to create a sound that’s nothing short of exquisite, like pressed flowers rediscovered in an old, discarded book. Even the more palpably electronic elements are hand sculpted in a way that belies the era we’re living in - it’s music for a digital age that sounds oddly unplugged, flawed and human. An unmistakably lovely antidote to the opiating nostalgia of our time.