Grumbling Fur - Furfour album review

UK avant-garde duo Grumbling Fur’s latest deals in experimental bliss with pop at its soul

Grumbling Fur - Furfour album art

You can trust Louder Our experienced team has worked for some of the biggest brands in music. From testing headphones to reviewing albums, our experts aim to create reviews you can trust. Find out more about how we review.

Grumbling Fur’s two lead protagonists – Daniel O’Sullivan and Alexander Tucker – are busy. With ties to many of the UK’s most prominent experimental exports, their collaborations just this year include work with Sunn O)))’s Stephen O’Malley, This Heat and Ulver, as well as a Tucker solo album and the publication of his latest comic. Consequently Furfour is permeated by London’s avant-garde – including appearances by This Heat’s Charles Bullen and artwork by collaborator and Turner Prize nominee Mark Titchner.

Furfour’s experimentation covers a lot of ground. There’s minimal electronica in Come Down And Watch Them’s glitchy intro and Suneaters’ sparse, rattling beat; there’s the lo-fi, mournful new wave pop of Milky Light and Silent Plans/Black Egg, which pays more than a passing reference to Depeche Mode and Dave Gahan’s vocal turns; there are nods to a Revolver-era fascination with world music in the exhaustive list of instrumentation used (or mimicked).

But where this album is most accomplished is in exploring these areas while remaining anchored to something warm and accessible. Unafraid to test its own boundaries, here’s an album with glorious, joyful pop at its heart.

Grumbling Fur: Hairy On The Inside

Alexander Tucker: Third Mouth

Briony Edwards

Briony is the Editor in Chief of Louder and is in charge of sorting out who and what you see covered on the site. She started working with Metal Hammer, Classic Rock and Prog magazines back in 2015 and has been writing about music and entertainment in many guises since 2009. She is a big fan of cats, Husker Du and pizza.