www.salon.com70%
Xiu Xiu channels the spectral sounds of “Eraserhead”72%
By Kelly McClure0%
7/10/2026, 5:39:28 PM
BS Summary: This article contains 0 faulty reasoning types, including no named faulty reasoning patterns yet, with no single egregious example has been isolated yet. Analysis detected 0 faulty-reasoning hits from 337 analyzed words, generating a BS Score of 67.7% and a BS Rank of 72% (3,947 of 13,766 articles). This article is worse (more manipulative) than 71.30% of the article peer group.
Listening to Xiu Xiu’s “ Eraserhead ” on a hot and stormy Friday afternoon is an atavistic summoning of the many gifts that David Lynch left us to remember him by. Out July 10 via Polyvinyl (and pointedly absent from Spotify), the band’s latest tribute to the music of Lynch’s most famous work is a follow-up to their release of “Plays the Music of Twin Peaks” in 2016, which was composed under the blessing of Lynch himself. Related David Lynch’s musical collaborations built worlds out of what was heard as much as what was seen Over seven tracks, many of which are lengthy, so as to allow listeners to really sink into and meditate upon the clanks and cluds and hisses of the industrial gloom of the film itself, Xiu Xiu’s “Eraserhead” album ends with the heartbreak it builds towards from the start, with frontman Jamie Stewart putting his signature mournful vocals to best use for his rendition of Peter Ivers and David Lynch’s “In Heaven.” Having recently visited Lynch’s modest grave at Hollywood Forever Cemetery in Los Angeles, which faces a pond that’s become the lazy stomping ground for ducks, peacocks and sad-hearted film fans, I’m wondering now if it would be possible to go back and hide speakers in the greenery that would play Xiu Xiu’s “Eraserhead” on a loop. The sound of Hollywood traffic in the background, birds splashing water, and Stewart’s ghostly delivery of “In Heaven, everything thing is fine,” could be the spell that brings the night blooming jasmine off the text on Lynch’s grave and into the air. Read more about this topic “Golden sunshine and blue skies all the way”: The light of David Lynch will never go out There’s no more music in the air — “Twin Peaks” mourns the loss of Julee Cruise David Lynch’s films pull back the red curtain on our shared reality The post Xiu Xiu channels the spectral sounds of “Eraserhead” appeared first on Salon.com .
Analysis
Hover over highlighted words in the article to view the associated bias or fallacy analysis.