The core sound of Jason Martin's band seems to shift from album to album, and sometimes from song to song within an album, without losing a consistent identity. Is it lo-fi indie rock, alternative rock with a shoegaze vibe, dream pop, or shoegaze with an indie twist? Wikipedia can fill in the biographical details if you're interested.
Check out the youtube playlists below by clicking on the album covers. In most web browsers, you can right-click to find an option to open the link in a new tab.
Silver
This first album shows the heaviest shoegaze influences with all the characteristic distortion, subdued vocals, and wall-of-sound effect.
Gold
Again, heavy shoegaze sound, but with a darker tone to the obscure lyrics, and the music video released for the title track is weird.
Americana
Instead of just getting the album color as a title, we get an actual name! This album also begins to shift toward a cleaner alternative rock sound.
The Fashion Focus
And then, out of left field, there's this. No monochromatic cover, no stereotypical shoegaze dominating the mix, and a lot more keyboards. This is a sudden shift to indie pop/rock. Not that it's a bad thing.
Everybody Makes Mistakes
Following the trend of "The Fashion Focus," this album has a pop/rock vibe with a softer overall sound. The track "No More Shows" has a vocal effect reminiscent of the earlier shoegaze albums, and there are other audio cues throughout that maintain a cohesion with the overall SF59 sound that runs through the entire discography.
Leave Here A Stranger
The Los Angeles Times ranked this album among the top 10 for 2001. It is by far the most "pop" and least "rock" of SF59's work.
Old
A return to rock with a rollicking guitar-driven sound. A fan favorite.
I Am The Portuguese Blues
Monochromatic covers are back! This is another rock album with some solid guitar driving the music. This album draws on unfinished work that was originally written to follow "Americana" before the band decided to shift its sound toward what became "The Fashion Focus."
Personal note: This was the first SF59 album I purchased, so I can't claim to be one of the people who has been a fan since "Silver."
Talking Voice vs. Singing Voice
Time for another shift in sound, this time to synthesizers and strings in a laid-back indie pop direction.
My Island
This 2006 release seems to draw from the past albums, recombining the various preexisting elements in new ways.
Dial M
A continuation and evolution of the sounds from My Island.
Personal note: This album will always sound a bit strange to me, because I first listened to an album called "Ghosts of the Past" that had alternate mixes of most of these songs. It's good, but slightly different from what I expect every time I hear it.
The Changing of the Guard
Solid alternative rock with introspective lyrics influenced by personal loss.
IAMACEO
Funded on Kickstarter and recorded at an outside studio instead of his usual Tooth & Nail producers, this independent album is superb.
Slow
This newest album has been reviewed by NPR and is available on Freegal if your local library subscribes to that service. There are only 8 tracks, but the musical diversity is a sort of career retrospective.
Summary
There's probably something here that suits your taste, and whatever your taste may be, you may find yourself drawn to the full catalog. However you try to define the changing sounds over the years, Starflyer 59 is worth a listen.
All album images from their respective Wikipedia pages except IAMACEO, which is from iTunes. All albums and EPs can be purchased via Amazon, iTunes, or other music outlets. If you like the band, support them where you can!
Author's note: This is a re-post of an article from my Steemit account with some minor edits. I apologize if my Russian tags are in error, since I am relying on Google Chrome to translate the original text in the trending topics list for me.