Tiny Mix Tapes shared the premiere of the single’s video, calling it “the perfect recipe for a longing sense of desire to suspend the days of a clichéd youth.” The site expanded on Kaplan’s music, “Somewhere at the intersection of lo-fi and pop, the song builds a narrative of nostalgia mixed with contentment in the present. Echoing vocals and swaying melodies complement the faded color scheme of the images, like walking into your long-abandoned childhood bedroom, the walls lined with sun-bleached photographs, everything muted by the film of dust covering it.”
About The Craters:
Wes Kaplan has been creating music under the name The Craters for years. Deeply tucked away in his apartment in Boston, MA, Kaplan’s perfected home-made recordings take just as much of an influence from late 60’s Beach Boys as they do from deep-cuts such as early MBV and Minneapolis’s 12 Rods. Mixing electronic post-production techniques with jangly guitar interplay and subtle vocal harmonies, Kaplan captures the essence of his hooks thoroughly and convincingly within two-and-half minute pop songs. The Crater’s new EP Kids Can Tell shows in under twelve minutes what Kaplan has learned from the past eight years of home recording.
Kids Can Tell is available for pre-order from Designer Medium Records and you can follow Wes and the band onBandcamp, Soundcloud and the usual social media avenues.