- The return of my favourite band named after a loaf of bread (don't trust me - go and Google it). On this remix EP with a few extra tracks chucked in all the things I liked about this Danish group (hmm... wait, that's bread too... tasty) return with a few unexpected treats besides. Salli Lunn mix up sweet, dark indie-rock, driving post-punk and atmospheric post-rock so easily and with such convincing results it's a wonder it doesn't get done more often. Courtesy of their remixers we get a few more styles - the chilling industrial grind of Scott Solter's mix of Mirror Girl; TV-Baby's electro-rocking rework of 50 Kisses that sounds something like UNKLE; or the kraut-rock fugue generated from The Invention Of Steel by it's original producer Jonas Munk. The new tracks are nice - the spacey rocking of The First Cause and the slow but inexorable groan of White Sight, but it's the remixes which take pride of place here. I particularly like Markus Mehr's version of Parachutes Forever: juxtaposing shards of the song's mesmerising rhythm section with harsh cut-ups that really make you sit up and take notice. Many remix records come off like an unexpected, sometimes contrived reworking of the original material. As with every component that Salli Lunn employs, A Frame Of Reference sounds like a logical progression, expertly machined and falling perfectly into place.