After winning Canada’s coveted Polaris Music Prize for his 2008 album “Andorra,” musician Dan Snaith (who performs with a backing band under the stage name Caribou) had some pressure going into… By ...
DAN Snaith likes to swim freestyle. It's just that in Ontario, Canada, where he's from, they call it something else. "I only really know how to do the front crawl. I got obsessed with it because it's ...
Caribou's nine-song Swim follows his nine-song 2007 Polaris Winning-Andorra. The last one was 42:59. This one's 43:10. Just a quick, statistical way of pointing that that since Dan Snaith founded his ...
You know how Caribou's Swim is one of the greatest and biggest records of the year. Well it's not finished just yet, as there's a remix album on the way, featuring some of the finest reworkers and ...
Almost every time it plays, no matter where, we are reminded of how great Caribou's "Odessa" actually is, because for some reason we always seem to forget. Maybe it's because it sounds like an Arto ...
It’s called “Swim” for a reason. The third album from Caribou — aka Ontario-born, London-dwelling Dan Snaith — is a beautiful, bleary-eyed after-party carried out to sea on subtle undercurrents, ...
Dan Snaith’s adventurous music, first as Manitoba and now as Caribou, has ranged from serene, defiantly melodic IDM to backward-looking psychedelia and krautrock. Though Swim is less referential, the ...
DAN Snaith likes to swim freestyle. It's just that in Ontario, Canada, where he's from, they call it something else. "I only really know how to do the front crawl. I got obsessed with it because it's ...
The first Caribou record since the Polaris Prize-winning 'Andorra' is a fine blend of indie, electronica and creeping psychedelia. Think a more experimental Royksopp meets a less-commercial Hot Chip.
Canadian bedroom producer Dan Snaith, who releases music under the name Caribou, has been putting out records for 10 years. This might be the only one you really need. It's brimming with enough ideas ...
Caribou is the alter ego of Dan Snaith, a Canadian electronic music producer with a maths PhD in “overconvergent Siegel modular forms”. No, me neither. Happily Swim follows an equation understandable ...