On the band's debut self-titled album,
Lowlights plays a very laid-back psychedelic country-rock. You could lump them in with
Beachwood Sparks (without the twee vocals) or
the Tyde (but with songs). Or you could compare them to
the Church as the band's own label does, since they share the same gloomy atmospheric sensibility and deadpan vocals. Or you could compare them to an unpretentious
Spiritualized, since they both deal in a layered, dense wall of sound. If you want, you could even trace the band back to
Gram Parsons or
Lee Hazlewood, the country mavericks who expanded the genre back in the late '60s. Best of all, you could forget all the comparisons and just enjoy the record. Dameon Lee and co-producer and visionary Dustin Reske (of indie pop faves
Rocketship) have crafted a beautifully melancholy album full of sad pedal steel that echoes like a bad memory, sweet harmony vocals courtesy of the angelic
Angela Brown, acres of layered strummed guitars, and Lee's slightly gravelly mournful lead vocals. Reske and Lee arrange the record like two studio magicians, making each song sound different but similar, like pieces from the same haunting jigsaw puzzle. The individual songs don't stand out from one another; they are all excellent, and from beginning to end the record is unified by sweet, reverbed melancholy. So many bands that tread the same lonely footsteps as
Lowlights fail for one reason or another (weak vocals, boring songs, clichéd arrangements), but
Lowlights avoids all the pitfalls and has released a stunning debut. One of the best, saddest records from 2003 that you are liable to hear.