

Rough-and-ready drum tracks.
"Gulf Stream" begins mid-step, as if it was waiting for you to press play. We're greeted by a misshapen kick drum, the occasional synth sweep and distant, dubbed-out chords. A friend of mine compared the record to some of the earliest and most popular releases on L.I.E.S., and like those records, Petty is both ragged and proficient. "Tree Frog Whistle" seems rowdy and destructive at first, but there's something uplifting about its driving synth pattern and kicks, which cough and sputter. The same goes for "Offset In The Shadow," where a feisty kick-and-snare pattern struggles against brittle arpeggios parked between vintage Luke Slater and Detroit electro. The fight gets nasty towards the end, as the track nearly combusts.
"I Know I Am Petty" is the odd one out. Its melodica-style chords are melancholy, rubbing against the grain of the skippy drumbeat. But you get the sense that Butler is resisting expectations on purpose. They named the EP Petty as "a reminder to myself to reject the performance of respectability" that black people are often expected to undertake to succeed in society. This EP is its own form of rebellion.
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Published /
Fri / 1 Feb 2019 -
Words /
Andrew Ryce -
Tracklist /
A1 Gulf Stream
A2 I Know I Am Petty
B1 Tree Frog Whistle
B2 Offset In The Shadow