Shellac
Touch and Go Records
Dude Incredible
LP |05/18/2014
Released in 2014 via Touch & Go Records, Dude Incredible is a sharp, focused return from the trio Shellac, following a seven-year gap since their previous full-length.
The album opens with the title track Dude Incredible, hammering out its intent with raw riffing and stop-start rhythms that hit hard and don’t relent. The band’s usual minimalism is heightened here rather than sprawling tracks, the album consists of nine songs in just over half an hour, the fat trimmed away to leave direct, unflinching rock.
Tracks like Compliant and The People’s Microphone demonstrate Shellac’s mastery of restraint and precision: the riffs loop, the rhythms pulse, and each element locks in so tightly that the impact is acute. The second half introduces a thematic thread around surveying and measurement (All the Surveyors, Mayor/Surveyor, Surveyor), adding a conceptual cohesion without ever becoming overtly grandiose.
Production is crisp yet austere, recorded at their familiar Electrical Audio studio. There’s no lush layering, no excess just the three members playing with full intent, each hit sounding charged, the bass and drums locked together, the guitar biting.
Dude Incredible is not about easy listening. It doesn’t offer big choruses or overt hook lines rather it rewards repeat listens, exposing its craft and the band’s tight interplay. That said, for listeners seeking more overt melody or conventional song structure, it may feel terse or unforgiving. Some critics noted it lacks a couple of standout tracks that might elevate it further.
In sum, Dude Incredible captures Shellac at a high level of clarity and intensity. It serves both as a reaffirmation of their strengths minimalism, precision, power and as evidence that they still have something meaningful to say without embellishment. For fans of the band’s aesthetic, it hits strongly; for newcomers, it offers a potent introduction to a band that does less, and does it very well.