Posts tagged: folk

Gomez – Whatever’s On Your Mind

By , June 28, 2011 12:00 pm

Gomez – Whatever’s On Your Mind

ATO Records 2011

Rating: 6/10

Five musicians, four songwriters, three vocalists – one would think that over the course of nearly a decade and a half the differing creative pulls would have torn Gomez apart already. Yet Whatever’s On Your Mind continues the trend that 2006’s How We Operate started for a band remarkably consistent in its power-pop output: another great record, chock full of five-part harmonies and crunchy guitar melodies considerably brightened up by the band’s trademark eclecticism. It’s this willingness to play with different genres that has served the band well since they took home the Mercury Music Prize with their 1998 debut, but it’s also experimentation that has been considerably softened over time as the group has turned more and more towards “forward-thinking” pop music that tends to occasionally veer towards Dave Matthews Band-inspired adult contemporary.

Gomez’s continued growth, then, or lack thereof, is a bit disappointing for a band that once showed so much promise with a bastardized version of Britpop that culled its influences from everything from old delta blues to psychedelic folk to jam band noodling. The essential ingredients are all right there and kicking – Whatever’s On Your Mind evenly splits up vocal duties between Ian Ball and Tom Gray’s more soothing vox and Ben Ottewell’s gravelly howl, and tracks like the complicated pop of “I Will Take You There” and groovy first single “Options” exemplify the best of what make Gomez such an exciting listen, albeit still a defiantly pop outfit. The way instruments drop in and out of the mix, the occasional horn and dub breakdown adding just the right spice to a tune, the fuzzy Sleigh Bells-ish bass thump of “Equalize,” or how “Just As Lost As You” turns a standard power-pop frolic into a surging wave of brass and organ; the band’s songwriting chops have undeniably aged well. If there’s a disappointment here, it’s that the band’s biggest strength in Ottewell’s distinctive pipes has been shackled with more weepy string-laden ballads like the schmaltzy “Our Goodbye” rather than the more in-his-wheelhouse rock of “Equalize.”

For all the studio tricks and bits of stylistic flair the band brings to the table, however, Whatever’s On Your Mind is still fundamentally the same record the band have been making for quite a while. “Options” is right up there with the strongest singles Gomez have ever penned, but Whatever’s On Your Mind fails to leave much of a lasting impression aside from the hooks and the impressive way the band can make a straightforward pop tune sonically adventurous. They’ve settled into that sweet spot where they really don’t have to do anything drastic to their sound: they put on a wild live show, and the band’s intimate knowledge of the many ways a pop song can go from being merely serviceable to unique and exciting is something to marvel at after fourteen years. There’s just something vaguely frustrating about a band as intrinsically talented as Gomez seemingly content to live out the rest of their days releasing albums that no one will remember in a few years time, rather than the genre-busting freshness that their debut promised.

Gomez – “Options”

Alvarius B. – Baroque Primitiva

By , June 27, 2011 11:00 am

Alvarius B. – Baroque Primitiva

Abduction Records 2011

Rating: 7/10

Last year, the Sun City Girls name was respectfully put to bed by the Bishop brothers by the way of Funeral Mariachi, a record of material pulled from an archive so big that it reaches beyond whatever planet it might turn out the trio were channelling. It felt fitting that this material was taken from work done with member Charles Goscher before his early passing, but it serves as a reminder of this trio as the unstoppable force of the avant-garde, not only when they existed- Funeral Mariachi itself weird as ever, a crossover record of film tributes, world guitar music and language games- but also beyond. The experimental treasures to be found in the ridiculous amount of their recordings will live on, embodied in that final record, and while bands such as King Crimson may live in their different setups forever, Sun City Girls will remain the Bishops and their friend Goscher, immortal in their ability to fuck with the minds of those who let them and immortal for the depths of exploration they did in their thirty odd years. It was weird, cultish and mystical- at times, it was disgusting poetry, at others it was world music played as if by aliens. Most of the time it was a lot of fun and all of the time it was really freaky. And boy was it endless.

But while Sun City Girls were either musically demented or poetically disturbing on any given day, Baroque Primitiva, the second record of Alan Bishop’s Alvarius B., takes the alien nature out of the world-music tribute and strips down the lyric to no more than the noises you can make with your tongue. So “Naturally Absolute” feels a lot less avant-garde while still being layered beyond belief and constructed of complex guitar patterns that would’ve messed with your head if they were on, oh, say, 330, 003 Crossdressers From Beyond the Rig Veda. Here, they’re welcoming, and the track at least sounds stripped to its core, leaving it meditative and listenable as an emotional piece for the less weird moments in life. The dah-dums might take you by surprise, which is not to say that Sun City Girls weren’t a laugh riot in their time- they mucked around with the avant-garde music they would later become heralded for, and as a result there wasn’t a second where Torch of the Mystics was gloomy- but the Alvarius B. project is the closest a member of the band has come to opening a dialogue with its listener. Bishop’s still fucking around, but as with “Naturally Absolute,” the music is softer, more reflective, and at the end of the day, nothing more than Alan Bishop playing chords on an acoustic guitar.

That, of course, fails to tell the whole story of Baroque Primitiva, which explores a whole lot of world music avenues. “Humor Police” is quickly paced psychedelic folk, and opening cover “Dinner Party” is a short exhibition of Spanish music. Both play in that slightly warped Sun City Girls way; the guitars are bent a little to the side in “Humor Police” and Bishop’s voice warbles unapologetically, but both still shed a little more joy than is to be expected. And where Baroque Primitiva really lets its guard down is on “God Only Be Without You,” a Beach Boys cover that finally gives indie fans the chance to apply the phrase “Beach Boys harmonies” to a band that wrote an album called Horse Cock Phepner. It is as it should be, warped beyond belief and with dissonance covering the little acoustic act of tribute below it. But regardless of the horns that eventually start blaring over Brian Wilson’s love song, it ends Baroque Primitiva as sweet and silly even when it puts up its avant-garde disguise. And what about that James Bond cover? This Sun City Girl is having a lot of fun writing three minute acoustic songs and reinterpreting the classics into a world setting, and while it’s coming across a lot more accessible to its audience here, it’s heartening that Sun City Girls remain forever a force, immortal beyond their name. And it’s nice that they give us a smile now and then.

Alvarius B. – “The Dinner Party”

Okkervil River – I Am Very Far

By , June 14, 2011 12:00 pm

Okkervil River – I Am Very Far

Jagjaguwar 2011

Rating: 8/10

It’s not healthy listening to Okkervil River. We can heap all the praise we want on them for their lyrical depth, we can crown Will Sheff as the wordsmith and world-weary analyst he most certainly is, but at the end of the day you’re listening to some fucked up stuff. A track like “Westfall,” featured on what is essentially a break-up album from a man of literature, cuts through the treacle of silly words like ‘right’ and ‘wrong’ and instead just says “when I killed her / it was so easy that I wanted to kill her again,” with a horrible shrug to its audience. And it’s not that he always writes tracks with the same shrug, nor the same psychotic theme, but they always come with the same damaging, scary obsession. The suicide of Tim Hardin, chronicled in the dark spaces of Black Sheep Boy, is a terrifying look at Sheff reflecting how his hero has messed him up, and that the record starts with a cover of Hardin’s famous folk loner-anthem is enough to take the myth and make it real, the album concluded with a song just as bottomless as painful in “A Glow,” but coming from Sheff himself. That’s why it’s bizarre to call these records ‘concept albums’ when Sheff is deconstructing his themes so horribly, as if they weren’t so much concepts as Sheff’s reality. It’s the same with The Stage Namesand The Stand-Ins, supposed twin albums that don’t pretend to be from our world but become just as human when Sheff demystifies all the actors, all the porn-stars and pop rockers in the world and kicks them off their pedestal. But what’s scariest about Black Sheep Boy, about The Stand-Ins and so on, is that Sheff dives at these tragic themes and legends like he needs them- “I need a myth,” indeed. Tim Hardin and all the rock stars on rockaway beach are myths made real. Hasn’t he always needed one?

But I Am Very Far is more our myth than his. Sheff stated upon the records announcement that he was apprehensive to tell us what those four words meant for fear of taking what was mysterious out of his record. He told us that he wasn’t making music to please but rather taking it down any route that best interested him. And that explains a lot of why the avenues of I Am Very Far are so perplexing; the record isn’t the kind of thing you crack, and not just at first; I’ve spent a good month trying to work out what I make of these eleven songs, and even with a hundred listens there’s little reveal. It feels harder than ever to tell what Sheff is thinking, more so than on his most fucked up travels: “Westfall” was a disturbing track, but it was distinctly obvious what Sheff was saying because it was storytelling. Here, however, Sheff’s music feels a hundred times veiled, comprised of abstract non-stories told by a hundred characters making not one moment of sense. That’s probably why “Piratess” takes an old fan-favourite, “Murderess,” and recreates it as some sexy disco song, taking whatever Big Star folk vibe it had and simply murdering it. “Piratess” now twinkles with electric guitar riffs, moves with the pulse of a bass guitar, and plays with a completely different Sheff at its centre, no longer wailing like a man lost at his pirate-laden sea. It no longer feels like a story at all, focused on its weirder groove, with its obsession to be what Sheff called the “sexiest Okkervil River song ever.” There are hand-claps. Hand-claps!

This is very much the way of I Am Very Far. It packs an astonishing amount of things unheard of in an Okkervil River album. “We Need a Myth” feels lyrically impossible to grasp at, Sheff fending off listeners with his big-band to the left and right, forty nylon string guitars in as many hands. But it’s kind of glorious watching the rise and fall of these theatrics. No track in Okkervil River’s discography has ever quite been captured like any of the eleven here, none go off the deep end as much as “We Need a Myth” does in every second of its existence, dressed up as it may be. It bears down on us in a way that this band never used to do as a folk or rock outfit, but you’ve never heard Sheff care as much as he does here. “Hanging Like a Hit” starts clashing together with a similar indescribable need for something that simply becomes documented by noise. Stories that Sheff just started throwing filing cabinets across the room as he recorded don’t feel unfounded at all: it’s all explosions on I Am Very Far. They’re what translate the record named on an expression we don’t understand. It’s the huge, amplified moments in “Wake and Be Fine,” and the chaotic, Arcade Fire-big “White Shadow Waltz” that makes I Am Very Far. It’s the last fifty seconds of “Lay of the Last Survivor” that is everything about this record, with Sheff singing every word like it’s escaping from his gut. I Am Very Far is huge, but not because it disguises itself like “Piratess” might have you think. It feels like a complete emotional release, and even if we understand zero of it, Sheff’s not hiding.

In fact, for those of us waiting for Sheff’s moment as himself rather than the archivist, as someone who just writes the typically personal singer-songwriter album, we surely have it in I Am Very Far. This is the record where Will Sheff stops talking about all of the rock stars he wanted to talk about before, regardless of the odd cryptic lyric, and talks in the first person. And to get that, you need this big-band Okkervil River- it’s not about forgetting how emblazed everything sounds or forgetting the big-band theatrics booming on the twenty-billionth stanza of “We Need a Myth.” These things all feel crucial to how Sheff would write his manic version of For Emma, Forever Ago. He works backwards, brings in ten times the number he needs and creates a record that pummels us to pieces on every note. With more people than ever factoring into his work, Sheff creates the record that feels the most wholly his own.

On “Show Yourself,” a track that supposedly meandered for eight minutes in its first incarnation, Sheff uses all the song’s twists and turns to anchor himself at the centre, eventually shedding the songs unfathomably huge build to fall into the record’s most revealing (and most poetic) moment: “There is no one there to help you there is no one there to hold you / let it go. I’ve felt enough, can’t really feel it anymore.” At this point it feels obvious what I Am Very Far is about: it lets go of the smoky barrooms other people got drunk in and Sheff wrote about and creates something that looks inward. Regardless of who it is we’re looking inward at, Sheff has taken away what was grounded in his older personal songs such as “Calling and Not Calling My Ex” and instead created something impenetrable and abstract. That, I feel, is what Sheff was hitting at when he said he was making music he was interested in without a care for accessibility and understanding in the world. I Am Very Far is a record by a folk musician but without folk. It’s by a storyteller telling no stories. And yet it stands to be the material most reflective of its artist, an album that in years will surely be seen as his most personal and most misunderstood, because what is there to understand in this record? I Am Very Far is Okkervil River’s most mysterious moment, just as fucked up as Black Sheep Boy or The Stage Names but not chasing after another name. I Am Very Far indeed, whatever that means.

Okkervil River – “Piratess”

Chad VanGaalen – Diaper Island

By , June 2, 2011 11:00 am

Chad VanGaalen – Diaper Island

Sub Pop 2011

Rating: 8/10

Chad VanGaalen comes to us with an air of mystery. His hand in producing Women’s Public Strain helped disguise a record of conflict we only got revealed when the lyrics jumped out of line, and in his career as a composer his music has been no easier to take in. “Willow Tree,” a track that dealt with dark metaphors of death and the afterlife, was played jubilantly on banjo and sung halfway between melancholy and joy: “And when I die / I’ll hang my head beside the willow tree.” It remains perhaps his most beautiful achievement in song writing, but it makes an example of a lot of the quirks found in VanGaalen: he haunts us, dazzles us, jokes with us, and at the end of the day can’t sacrifice any of those things for the other. Hence “Shave My Pussy,” right? It sounds like a joke, but if that track didn’t haunt and dazzle in equal measure, it wouldn’t be the closer to Diaper Island.

But while VanGaalen has always been brilliantly diverse like that, able to take “Willow Tree” and make it horrifically bittersweet, what is so confrontational about Diaper Island (aside from that it’s called Diaper Island) is his ability to compress his diversity into this one little style. By creating an album that revolves around nothing more than coarse, often tuneless guitar work and those hopeless lyrics, VanGaalen has every song carry the weight of “Heavy Stones” or “Sara,” or even the whacky “Can You Believe it!?” Creating such a tightly-knit record is a simple style a myriad of singer-songwriters have lived by, and in that sense Diaper Island feels just as uncompromising, if in a different way, as the equally miserable Blood on the Tracks.

There’s a lot to be said of the ugliness that plays through Diaper Island, a record that VanGaalen seems to have designed around angularity. Whereas Infiniheart and Soft Airplane sprawled through folk touchstones and warped electronic sounds at the same time, his fourth record feels constantly tied to its gritty atmosphere, able to rock out on “Freedom for a Policeman” with the same tone of bitterness that comes on a track as bare and miserable as “Heavy Stones.” And a little more on “Heavy Stones,” a track that sounds like both a surf-rock b-side for Chris Isaak’s “Wicked Game” and a tensely obscured Public Strain number: it takes the angular nature of Diaper Island and says something that doesn’t even sound sweet in a tragic singer-songwriter way. The lyrics, instead, are shapeless: “lately, you’ve been some other thing.” Strange, then, that lines this vague could contribute to the least mysterious Chad VanGaalen record yet, a record able to look directly to its audience in spite of its burial in guitar noise and lo-fi production.

“Shave My Pussy” stands to be misunderstood as both an outrageous suggestion and a dumb joke, but what it carries with it is the same weight “Heavy Stones” did earlier on: “maybe if I shave my pussy then you’ll love me, baby will you love me? / I’m really feeling ugly.” The line is, against all odds, more heart-breaking than hilarious. It’s another declaration like the one on “Sara” to not be left behind, or the lament that he’s been waiting forever on “Wandering Spirits.” Diaper Island isn’t about taking these moments and pointing at them for how bizarre they are, hence why VanGaalen sings the lines of “Shave My Pussy” so straight-faced, and for that reason his fourth record isn’t ugly itself. It certainly thinks about ugliness and waits on it with all the honesty with which VanGaalen can deliver lines about his hypothetical pussy, but the music VanGaalen makes isn’t as ugly as it feels it is, is only vague if vagueness can touch you, and is only ghostly if we’re all having the same warped hallucinations our songwriter is. Diaper Island is a very open wound, and those who listen won’t have to seek it out.

Chad VanGaalen – “Sara”

My Morning Jacket – Circuital

By , May 31, 2011 12:00 pm

My Morning Jacket – Circuital

ATO Records 2011

Rating: 5/10

“RIYL: getting reacquainted with your roots, music recorded in a church gymnasium, forging new ground while maintaining a distinct spirit.”

The above is loosely taken from a Circuital press release. In related news, marketing is one of the worst professions around. Circuital would have you believe that it’s a reaffirmation of the My Morning Jacket of old, of stellar alt-country gems like At Dawn or Z’s soaring experimental psychedelia, but Circuital is more a weak-kneed reminder of My Morning Jacket’s potential. It’s sort of like looking back on one’s misspent youth and remembering things to be a helluva better than they actually were, or, alternatively, listening back to 2008’s Evil Urges and thinking those funky side trips were actually a good idea. Circuital, luckily, doesn’t go quite as far off the rails as Evil Urges did, and it even starts off like everything is going to be okay. The one-two punch of “Victory Dance” and the title track are vintage MMJ, the former building itself up into a feedback soaked wail and the latter a plucked acoustic ditty that explodes into an invigorating display of power chords and Southern-fried guitar histrionics. When they’re on, their combination of old school rock musicianship and James’ distinctively powerful voice is hard to beat. It’s unfortunate, then, that much of this album finds the band unsure of just what they’re good at.

For a record that is supposed to be about the band rediscovering their identity, the rest of Circuital sounds like a hideously unsure thing, torn between sticking to the best of their folksy roots and playing up the worst of leader Jim James’ genre-of-the-day desires. “Outta My System” is a passable Beach Boys imitation, but with its elementary lyrics and go-nowhere structure, it merely serves to stick out like a sore thumb after the beautifully delicate ballad “Wonderful (The Way I Feel).” That’s nothing compared to “Holdin’ On To Black Metal,” a wantonly neon-lit big band number replete with Stax horns and a backup children’s choir. It calls to mind the worst excesses of Evil Urges and then some, a song so egregiously out of its depth that it throws the whole album out of whack. Placed as it is smack dab in the middle of Circuital makes it harder to ignore than most, and it’s a direct shot in the foot to a band that up until then had been well on their way to a record that, if not a true return to form, was at least mildly enjoyable.

It’s the kind of enjoyment distinctly separate from the kind one experienced when hearing the classic rock ‘n’ roll of It Still Moves’ “One Big Holiday” or Z’s ambitious opener “Wordless Chorus.” These are songs that float pleasantly, like the Beatles retro pop of “First Light,” or merely tease with hints of past successes (“You Wanna Freak Out”), songs that show the occasional glimpse of James’ songwriting talent but nothing more. Where previous MMJ albums have burnt out, usually in a haze of glorious guitar twists and turns, Circuital fades, first with a mushy track guaranteed to put everyone by the campfire asleep with “Slow Slow Tune” and then hammering away at the point (yet ever so softly) with the completely unremarkable “Movin’ Away.” It’s a light, pastoral tune that glides by on a melancholy piano line and the scenic pedal steel guitar that arcs over the melody, but it’s also completely, entirely safe and, dare I say it, boring. James’ Hallmarky lyrics (“possessed by your love / under the influence / and though there’s a new life line / I won’t forget the one I left behind”) don’t help matters, making the whole affair seem more like a man interested in creating some gently haunting sounds than saying anything real.

It drives home the point that My Morning Jacket has been making music for going on thirteen years now, and have appeared less like a band divining new inspiration from each other as time goes on and more like a group grasping for a sound that will make them relevant again. Better bands than MMJ are hooking onto the alt-country, folk scene that they brought screaming riffs and James’ howling falsetto to, including James’ own side projects. Circuital isn’t a bad album by any stretch, but in the context of My Morning Jacket’s body of work, it sounds hopelessly unsure of itself, content to create lesser shadows of past greats. A distinct spirit? Always. Forging new ground? Only in the minds of marketing execs.

My Morning Jacket – “Victory Dance”

My Morning Jacket – First Light

By , May 24, 2011 12:00 pm

Marketing calls My Morning Jacket’s new album “a return to the band’s roots,” but marketing also said the same thing about the Strokes new CD. Circuital is certainly more focused than 2008′s wildly uneven Evil Urges, but still retains much of the experimentation that pervaded that album. “First Light,” however, is about as retro as MMJ can be nowadays, complete with a barn-burning coda that sends the song off in anthemic fashion.

My Morning Jacket – “First Light”

The Dodos – No Color

By , May 5, 2011 10:00 am

The Dodos – No Color

Frenchkiss 2011

Rating: 9/10

 

As far as titles go, No Color really sucks. Who wants to see the Dodos in black and white and grey? The Dodos are all about the beating of the drum and the slips and tangles they get us lost in, so to take away that vibrancy, that spring in their step, is to create something out of the space this duo occupy. Even if you locked these guys in a room and set them to task with a strict slow-jams policy, you’d get the hung-up, devastatingly sad sounds of the Dodos- a track as crushing as “Winter” is a product of its band, a product of Visiter, a track in which Kroeber thumps at his kit like he’s teasing his other half to put more into it. Which, by the way, he actually is: there’s life and colour enough even for a track as cold as “Winter,” and it ends up as a minor moment played fast and loose. So it kind of feels like there’s no place for a Dodos who dress in gothic shades when they can do it all playing their own game. Which is all the colours of the rainbow, or something.

But really No Color suggests a different incarnation of the same band behind Visiter. That album really was ridiculous, which is where a lot of its appeal lies: it carried great emotional weight on its back (“Undeclared,” obviously), and it explored it so intensely that everything came out. At fourteen songs, Visiter was the Dodos in pursuit of every little thing, and it suited a band so frantic. It was a real rabbit-chase of an album, moving from one moment into the next completely unrelated one, from the quickie in “Eyelids” to “Fools,” from the album’s most chaotic track (“Joe’s Waltz,” chock full of dissonant piano and folk-punk duets) to, well, “Winter.” It was a mess from a band without an editor, and how could it have been any other way? Most bands would’ve realised that two songs as heavy-hearted as their last couple on that album shouldn’t sit together, but Long and Kroeber seemed to know exactly where the peaks and valleys of Visiter should’ve been.

And man was it wild, so where do the Dodos go from there? Their next two records have been nine tracks a piece, which seems both a statement of shortness and a wish to fragment things just a little less. It’s an album length so abrupt it sort of harkens back to how mad the whole Visiter thing was. And what is so great about No Color is that it unravels the crazy patterns in the Dodos’ sound in a completely different way. It allows them to discover what they can do with their songs rather than what their songs can do to their album. That’s what’s so supposedly uncolored about this cheekily titled album: it’s the same Dodos, silly, but one treating every song like its own moment, which is why even if “Black Night” flows into “Going Under” as well as anything on a prog-rock album, the explosion between the two isn’t laboured over. Nor is it some crazy transition- instead we can talk about what the songs do. “Black Night” feels as pushy as any Dodos track, moving from its steady tempo into a sudden twist in pace that opens the album with a fresh energy. “Going Under” sounds more than ever like the band trying to glue two different songs together, but it makes sense to have these moments together because emotionally, they’re within touching distance. And a nine-track Dodos album with “Good” on it? I guess this structure frees up the band in ways we never knew, because those guitar riffs fume forward out of the indie-folk and thrust the band ever forward through their song.

It saddens me to hear it said that No Color throws itself in with Time To Die and rests firmly on the laurels that the Dodos have earned. We can accuse the duo of playing the same card a hundred times over, or that this sound comes with its territory (you can only bang on a drum so many times), but No Color goes deep into emotional places the Dodos have never expressed so well. Much in the same vein as the sad-saps behind that new Fleet Foxes record, tracks jump out that sound wholly new for the Dodos because they look at a different feeling. It seems hard to think that the Dodos could pull of a track with all the desperation “Hunting Season” carries in 2008, with this crafty, silly musical style they play. Nor do I think it’s possible that we’ve seen them repeat a thing with “Companions,” a track that refuses to sacrifice that same style but is somehow the most downbeat we’ll ever see it. More so than “Winter” for sure, because it doesn’t give us the band upfront. And there’s something to be said of the record’s centrepiece, “Don’t Try And Hide it,” which brings indie superstar Neko Case aboard for a folksy anthem in-between that doesn’t know whether to laugh or cry. It’s complex stuff for a band who used to simply express themselves, and do so a lot- it’s Long and Kroeber looking at everything in a little more depth, and giving everything a little more time. And so once more, the Dodos feel fresh, a little bit more thoughtful, and every bit as happy to get us tangled up in ourselves. Of course there’s color to No Color. It’s just this time there’s black and white and grey as well- colors they’ve never used before.

The Dodos – “Black Night”

Fleet Foxes – Lorelai

By , April 26, 2011 8:00 am

The magic of leaks – Fleet Foxes‘ sophomore effort Helplessness Blues is still slated for its May 3 release date but is now available for streaming at the band’s website after the album leaked a few weeks back. I’ve had a bunch of time to listen to it and still don’t know what to think, but those looking for a abrupt shift in sound are coming to the wrong record. Helplessness Blues is similar to its predecessor, pastoral folk-rock with a vaguely alt-country bent, although this record doesn’t hit me with the immediacy that their debut did. “Lorelai,” however, comes close.

Fleet Foxes – “Lorelai”

The Mountain Goats – Estate Sale Sign

By , April 5, 2011 8:00 am

The Mountain Goats – most consistent band of the past decades, or increasingly commercialized sellouts? I’ve never been one to criticize John Darnielle’s superb folk project, but All Eternals Deck, their 13th album released last week, continues the group’s trend of moving in a more studio, fleshed-out production direction. Personally I dig it, as it lessens the focus on Darnielle’s sometimes divisive vocals and emphasizes his wonderful songcraft and amazing lyrics. Keep ‘em coming.

The Mountain Goats – “Estate Sale Sign”

The Dodos – Sleep

By , March 22, 2011 8:00 am

Given my quick perusal of the new Dodos album No Color and this excellent track, I have to say, after the disappointing Time to Die, the Dodos are back! I always thought the problem with Time to Die was it just seemed so refined and impeccably produced, and with a band like the Dodos it’s definitely better to be a little rough around the edges. Like their seminal The Visiter, No Color is bizarre and all over the place, and that’s just what the Dodos do best.

The Dodos – “Sleep”

Sufjan Stevens – All Delighted People EP

By , September 7, 2010 8:00 am

Sufjan Stevens – All Delighted People EP

Asthmatic Kitty 2010

Rating: 7/10

There’s a lot I admire about Sufjan Stevens. Too much, in fact. I like that he put Michigan and Illinois on the map for me and that in my ignorance I’m hard-pressed to name any other state. I like that he bursts into breakcore rock songs midway through charming acoustic sets. I like that he can’t decide whether to be super-serious or super-silly because let’s face it, posing with a banjo and a cowboy hat ends in frowns. I like his music a fair bit, too, even if it’s just an excuse for him to wear outlandish costumes. Angel-wings, anyone?

When I don’t like him I probably just end up admiring him more. Remember that musical mid-life crisis he had? You’d think that’d be the end of the road for any self-respecting fan, but it turns out it’s easier for us to believe in Sufjan than it is for him to believe in ‘the song’, or ‘the album’, or whatever else he tried to hate. He called the state-project a gimmick, and that probably swung it for us. No one in their right mind would call Illinoise and Michigan gimmicks- they’re so personal they could be postcards from your best pal. And now All Delighted People comes, aptly titled and generously packaged, and I know I’ll be spending more time celebrating than I will telling Sufjan we told him so.

All Delighted People is drowned in its own celebration, actually, and only comes up for air thirteen minutes into closer “Djohariah,” the sequel to Seven Swans’“Sister” in many clever ways. Maybe the fact that this EP most resembles that sweet and personal record of gospel stories, or the way in which both songs fit that description of “freak outs for single-mothers,” or perhaps just the simple in joke of a family tree. This is a good thing. It’s a beautiful continuation of a beautiful sequence, and in a way only this guy would know how- he strings together a guitar-solo with an acoustic lullaby and some finishing touches of bleepy electronica, and the whole thing could fall apart like a five-year-old’s arts and crafts project, sealed with nothing but excitement and flimsy gluing skills. Even with Sufjan trying to cram more in, he still sounds like that delicate trooper sporting a beginner’s banjo.

In a way, though, it’s more weird than beautiful. You crowned Sufjan baroque pop king for Illinoise and I did for Michigan, and these records were a darn sight different from what usually comes out of the genre. They had fluidity to them, not sounding overstuffed by the grand instrumental compositions but rather continuing to move calmly and at their own will; even if tracks were horrible to read out by name, they sounded soft and saccharine, not huge and rallying. That was what Funeral did- it had us bask in its arrangements– but not what Illinoisedid.

I notice these forceful features on All Delighted People, because it does sound overstuffed, and that’s probably the first time I can say that about Sufjan since A Sun Came. That was 21 tracks long, and this is, um, an EP. And it has everything; the full scale string arrangements, the trumpet guys in the corner, the wacky guitar solos from the genius himself, the quirky keyboard stuff, and reworked versions of songs that you were introduced to ten minutes ago. This isn’t such a shocking turn to take for Sufjan, and most of us could care less as we let the first listen glaze over us, but I feel overwhelmed as I never wanted to be by him. This is the guy who had me gliding through “Detroit,” a song with oh so many components but such seamless ease. Now I can hear the build-ups in “All Delighted People” and feel them knocking me over. Now I find myself waiting more than anything in “Djohariah,” noticing even the things I shouldn’t, such as the dissonant riffing that pulls away from its place in the background. And even a track as light and glorious as the synthy “From the Mouth of Gabriel” thumps up a little more than I want it to.

This thump is the thump of the album. All these songs still work out of the focus of the EP and even become more appreciated for it- “From the Mouth Of Gabriel” is slowly becoming a favourite Sufjan track in how it sounds like a Seven Swans session gone retro. By itself it’s simply gorgeous, lamenting and longing like no other track in his canon dared to do. “Heirloom” and “Arnika” reach similar ends if by more traditional means. When these songs come together at the album’s focus, the artsy twinning of “All Delighted People,” I can’t help but feel they’re being done a great injustice. They are no less important than the sprawls they are wrapped around.

Looking at these songs from the outside rather than one after another, I realise why I waited five years for this. It was because I knew Sufjan Stevens didn’t really hate music. We got it wrong when he said all that stuff about ‘the album’. I think what he really grew tired of washis album. I feel he’s done detailing these works and mapping these worlds for us, and that’s too bad for anyone still hoping for Sufjan to come to his or her state- personally, I’m done holding out for his ode to Kent, but if he’s up for it, they call it “the garden of England.” This is a fantastic collection of songs, if better for what they are rather than as a controlled unit; All Delighted People has eight of Sufjan’s rebounds, and while it’s taken him a while to get over music, he’s got there. Hurry along, October.

Sufjan Stevens – “From The Mouth of Gabriel”




New From: $7.92 In Stock
Release date August 23, 2010.

Sun Kil Moon – You Are My Sun

By , July 15, 2010 8:00 am

Mark Kozelek has always been a sparse kind of songwriter, preferring to let his gentle fingerpicking and weathered vocals do all the heartbreaking and storytelling for him, and damn any bells and whistles. His fourth album under the Sun Kil Moon, Admiral Fell Promises, might be his simplest yet – just Kozelek and his guitar, spinning multiple tales of woe. Whether you can take all of it over the course of an entire album is up to your personal preference for the man, but it’s undeniable that this track is one of his most heartfelt and accessible.

Sun Kil Moon – “You Are My Sun”

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