Skip to content

Post Dreams

Robert Rackley
Robert Rackley
1 min read
Post Dreams

Not too long ago, I posted about a shoegaze cover of a music charts staple from decades ago and, well, I was sorely tempted to do it again. 

I came across a YouTube channel for a service called Musora which bills itself as “the ultimate music lessons experience.” Musora offers a subscription which will help you learn to play an instrument and your favorite songs. For $20/month (with an annual subscription), you gain access to a suite of interactive practice tools and a community of like-minded students. 

In the video from Musora that I stumbled upon (algorithms can be helpful), shoegaze band La Lune is challenged to reimagine Fleetwood Mac’s “Dreams” on the spot. I’ve listened to “Dreams” quite a few times recently, so I was instantly drawn to the concept and this particular setup. The video features the band constructing their version of the song and then executing on their vision. It’s hard to call a shoegaze version of a classic rock standard a “straight cover.” However, La Lune maintain the darkly sweet intent of the original while bringing the “reverb, dissonance and distortion” that are features of the genre. It feels like a perfect update to the Fleetwood Mac classic. Though there is some discussion about how the vocals will be done during the planning section, bassist Olivia Wells handles the duties with aplomb. 

La Lune - Dreams (YouTube)


Vancouver’s La Lune is new to the scene, with only an EP, Disparity, that was released this year to comprise their discography. Though the lead track starts out with accoustic guitar, the EP quickly proves its shoegaze bona fides, with crushing walls of distortion and epic dynamics. The title track is a harrowing, almost claustrophobic slice of dreampop.

NoiseFriday Night Video

Robert Rackley

Mere Christian, aspiring minimalist, inveterate notetaker, budget audiophile and paper airplane mechanic. Self-publishing since 1994.


Related Posts

Members Public

A Side Hustle As The Doors

We all know by now that it’s getting tougher to make a living as a musician. While tools for producing music have gotten cheaper and more accessible, the ways to make decent money as a professional in the music industry have been drying up. Alex Marshall and Joanna Yee

A Side Hustle As The Doors
Members Public

Clandestine Noise Operations

Bill Corgan (Smashing Pumpkins, Zwan) recently pondered the decline in popularity of rock music on his podcast The Magnificent Others.  “Rock was the greatest single social-changing force of the 20th century,” he said. “And here we are 25 years into the 21st century and rock couldn’t be any less

Members Public

No One Is Lost

No One Is Lost by Stars My wife and I have long been devoted to music from the band Stars. It’s hard to pick a favorite album, but I especially treasure a few of the songs on No One Is Lost. The 2014 album was recorded in a studio

No One Is Lost