EOY, MATTERS

AOT // ALBUMS OF THE YEAR 2013 / 20 – 6

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20 // KELELA – CUT 4 ME

Debut mixtapes as intriguingly co-signed and exquisitely ambitious as that of Kelela Mizanekristos are few and far between. Whilst her vocals are elegant, coasting over her backing with subtlety and innate nous whilst proffering lyrics that are intimate and occasionally jarringly earnest, the real star here is the production. Drawn from the Fade to Mind and Night Slugs stable – with the likes of Nguzungzu, Kingdom and Jam City in particular shining – sonically Cut 4 Me is a constantly engaging listen, alternatively sparse and intricate, simple and dense, cold and lush.

19 // BEYONCÉ – BEYONCÉ

As power plays go, surprise releasing your music as an iTunes only release accompanied by 17 music videos is about as patently obvious a move Mrs Carter could have made. In hindsight.  Dropping it in December is unorthodox, but exclusive releases are industry promotion bread-and-butter (though the monopolising hasn’t half hacked off Amazon and Target). She’s even done the video schtick before with B’Day, though this time round it’s even more in line with the way we consume music now – smartphones tilted landscape. Dropping it without any specific promotion at all though – 2014 additions to her world tour aside – is just not the kind of move popstars make. That doing so generated more fervent and immediate buzz than months of careful marketing could ensured that it paid dividends, with the result that Ghost’s ad-libbed line “Probably won’t make no money off this, oh well” seems rather hollow now that Beyoncé is the fastest selling album of all time on iTunes. Now that the surprise has faded and the din of digital tills has silenced somewhat though, the real power of Queen Bey’s fifth solo record becomes easier to discern. Its substance. Production from blockbusters (Pharrell Williams, Ryan Tedder) and relative unknowns (Chairlift’s Caroline Polachek and Boots) alike, attention-grabbing in its attentiveness, varying between idiosyncratic and enormous often with the same track. Even more pressing are the records themes though: romance, sex, female empowerment, beauty, children, the music industry, death and more dealt with – if not always the greatest refinement – brazenly unapologetic frankness. As Anderson Cooper put it “It is Beyoncé’s world and we are just living in it.” All hail.

18 // MELT YOURSELF DOWN – MELT YOURSELF DOWN

The constantly refreshing timeline of new music – 5% of which you’ll actually get your teeth into, 15% you’ll do your darndest to, and 80% you’ll never/hopefully never realise ever existed  – can be exhausting, alienating, confusing and even tedious. Just when you’re about to pack it in and fire up Remain in Light for the umpteenth time though, a tonic is just round the corner. In case of emergency, smash the glass and reach for the debut record from Melt Yourself Down: a vibrant, exhilarating afro-jazz-punk-funk concoction that’s the perfect medicine for the new music greys. Whether going all out for the jugular on the blistering We Are Enough, or teasing you with the downtempo hand percussion driven funk of Free Walk, this is a highly intelligent, texturally diverse record capable of eliciting immediate primal gratification and careful rewarding close-analysis, fuelled by a consummate sense of merry abandon.

17 // FUCK BUTTONS – SLOW FOCUS

Fuck Buttons are two men who build acres of atmospheric playground. Slow Focus – with this level of consistency for the first time – makes that playground readily available for all who find the entrance. Though bludgeoning from the off – the first half of the record dominated by the likes of Brainfreeze, The Red Wing and Sentients: alien titans that crash and wallop across intergalactic mountain ranges – that bludgeoning’s function is to drag the listener into the state of ascendant otherness rather than simply numb submission. Music that can seem impossible to enter at first, ultimately proves seemingly impossible to leave. By the time the final transcendent, coursing notes of Hidden XS ring out you’ll never want to.

16 // FACTORY FLOOR – FACTORY FLOOR

Factory Floor boasts ten tracks of glistening physicality: music which painstakingly builds a towering sonic Siduhe between forebears-cum-collaborators Carter Tutti and the legions of the DFA which Factory Floor now call family. Compositionally, the band thrive on propulsive, enervating structural assonance, trapping listeners in a mesmeric web, glued in place as the melancholy vocal arachnid that is Niki Void circles ever closer. Listen to this record until your ears bleed. Then dance until your feet match.

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15 // DARKSIDE – PSYCHIC

An expectation of intricacies of intimate, expansive dark space invariably has come to be bound up with the very name Nicolas Jaar, due to the impeccable body of work he’s turned his Midas fingers to over the last few years. This unexpectedly Americana-inflected, deeply groove-laden collaboration with Dave Harrington though, might well be his finest work to date though. An exercise in somnambulant urgency over canvases large (Golden Arrow), and small (Sitra), Psychic oozes a simultaneously ancient yet very modern sensibility, like the streetlights of a desert town impossibly nestled in amongst the canyons and plains. On the staggeringly gorgeous core one-two punch of Paper Trails and The Only Shrine I’ve Ever Seen, there’s a sense of primal ambience akin to the “evening redness” Cormac McCarthy made his name upon. It’s a record of carefully refined textures, tempos and moods, which reach out their tentacles, hook onto your neural tissue and hold you deep, just as mesmerising as the title suggests.

14 // FOALS – HOLY FIRE

“Crucially, with this increasing repertoire and refinement comes a sparer use of any individual aesthetic. Facets of all the elements of their sound old and new, instead rise and fall to prominence throughout an album that operates like a Galileo thermometer, fluctuations in mood and temperature instigating appropriate shifts in song-writing and production. There’s a developing sense of freedom, and an artful awareness of their abilities and craft that marks Holy Fire out as highly-accomplished transmission – resounding if not necessarily earth-shattering – on the level of the instrumental in particular.”

Excerpt from Christopher T. Sharpe’s YANNIS PHILLIPPAKIS & THE BONFIRE OF THE VANITIES

13 // SAVAGES – SILENCE YOURSELF

“No amount of deference to post-punk influences like Joy Division and Bauhaus, or vocal evocations of Patti Smith or Siouxsie-Soux, could render this record unimaginative or irrelevant. The cacophony of guitars, the palpitating bass-line of Shut Up, even a sultry downtown venture into Marshal Dear, all collude to constitute a well-timed slap in the face to today’s buzz bands and their gaggle of fans, experiencing their live performances through the hi-res screens of their smartphones.”

Excerpt from Sophie Monk’s AN ANGRY YOUNG TUNE

12 // HOOKWORMS – PEARL MYSTIC

Pearl Mystic feels like rising up out of the rain and through the troposphere. Grey to white to bright, hell, purgatory and heaven absorbed into a few short moments of confusion and blindness. Then clarity. Water droplets on windows suddenly filled with sunlight.

It’s a record of precision, perfectly structured and flowing and yet its fuelled by a sense of expansive freedom, capturing that very moment of emergence, and yet its fuelled by a sense of expansive freedom. It’s glistening and blistering in equal measure and utterly, brilliantly triumphant.

11 // QUEENS OF THE STONE AGE – …LIKE CLOCKWORK

If they’ve stopped making rockstars – at least ones the ones who don’t start off on the very pretence of being a rockstar – the last off  the conveyor belt might well be Josh Homme. Though flanked, as-ever, with a band of stupidly talented musicians – typified by the capacity to replace long-term member Joey Castillo mid-recording with Dave Grohl as a stop-gap and then Jon Theodore as one hell of a touring drummer – QOTSA is, and always will be, the 6′ 5″ Carlo Von Sexron. Appropriately …Like Clockwork feels the most personal work of his career. Musically it encompasses and expands upon elements of the full-range of his musical output – from Screaming Trees and Arctic Monkeys to Eagles of Death Metal and Them Crooked Vultures – and then executing them to the utmost. It’s thematically though that the personal edge really strikes home though. My God Is The Sun is essentially a romantic manifesto of musical and personal being, whilst I Appear Missing and The Vampyre of Time and Memory take on depression and loneliness with a poetry, grandeur and gravitas that suits the band down to the ground – whilst simultaneously pushing them into veins they’ve never mined with such excellence before.  Stoner rock that’s sexy, dirty, gritty and utterly lucid.

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10 // THE NATIONAL – TROUBLE WILL FIND ME

“Enervating blood ties, romances won and lost, marital adversities, fading bonds of friendship: perhaps more than any other contemporary band The National’s very artistic make-up is predicated on the nuances of human relations. Such a nexus of interrelational trials and tribulations once again rears its head on their eagerly-anticipated sixth LP Trouble Will Find Me.

The build-up to this record saw the release of Mistaken for Strangers, a tour-documentary which inadvertently turned into an exhaustive portrait of the brothers Berninger, bringing another fraternal pairing into the band’s field of consciousness alongside founding sibling-sets the Dessners and Devendorfs.

It is in that vein that opener I Live In Salt arrives. Typically for the band it’s less of a kicking-down-the-door affair, more of an unexpected call at two in the morning. Wine bottle empty and heart full, the voice at the other end is possessed with the sort of earnest, deep-set confession to a loved one that ultimately came out of the documentary process: “I should live in salt for leaving you behind”. In their repertoire of album catalysts it’s not as enrapturing as Secret Meeting, as stately as Fake Empire, or as resoundingly titanic as Terrible Love, but even with the switch in tonal tact its measured, powerful build ensures that it’ll take a heart of stone not to ultimately melt.

This conflation of the subdued and gut-wrenching proves to be the underlying essence of the record. Where their peers might have been drawn towards the overblown – a concept album here, a gospel choir there – The National appear to have responded to their growing success by turning, more than ever, into and towards themselves.”

EXCERPT FROM CHRISTOPHER T. SHARPE’S RVW

09 // LAURA MARLING – ONCE I WAS AN EAGLE

Most simply of all, even several months after listening to it for the first time, there are still layers and tiny revelations to be unearthed during repeat listens. Whether it’s a particularly sharp lyric suddenly making its significance felt, or the recognition of motifs and melodies being mirrored and reshaped, it’s extraordinary to witness just how seamlessly the album flows as a whole. It’s a cyclical, theatrical tale of power struggles, which gradually circles itself to form a satisfying arc, whose familiar, repeated elements serve to accentuate the gradual, subtle changes in both sound and style. (For one example, consider how the frantic guitar runs of Take the Night Off and I Was An Eagle compare to the closing passages of Little Bird and Saved These Words.)

But it’s not just an exercise in symmetry. There’s a whole host of devices at work here, with emotions swelling, dipping and soaring throughout with no real conclusions or blunt points. The revelatory moments which are painstakingly constructed are, in isolation, barely distinguishable. Yet upon arriving during a full listening experience, they are cause for true delight. The quaking chills of Devil’s Resting Place and the unity of Where Can I Go? are but two examples; their polar catharses crafted atop the groundwork laid by previous tracks. Yet even then, no one track is dull in of itself. Thanks to Marling’s ever-flowering literary nous and her ways of pulling potent melodies from skeletal components, Once I Was An Eagle is able to keep its listeners completely absorbed for its entire 63-minute runtime.

EXCERPT FROM MICHAEL PERRY’S TINY REVELATIONS

08 // PARQUET COURTS – LIGHT UP GOLD

Post-punk was born to be this poetic. Throughout, whether delivered by Andrew Savage or Austin Brown, Light Up Gold’slyrics are droll and resonant – equally comfortable in realist romance (“My girl’s a borealis-lit fjord […] My girl is a beer, freshly poured”) or reflections on the dystopic contemporary employment landscape: (“There are no more roles on TV shows, there are no road-cone dispensing jobs […] but there are still careers in combat, my son”). They’re rich at their most prosaic (“I was debating Swedish Fish, roasted peanuts or licorice”) and abstract (“I saw, while squinting, the hidden layer in those lost-era grain elevators”), and they’re the main reason to bookmark this band and return to this record. Tracks like ‘N Dakota’ and ‘Yonder is Closer to the Heart’ are almost better read as prose poems in fact, managing to register an authentic experience of Americana in a style reminiscent of both Jonathon Richman and the Beat poets, but all the same strikingly current and refreshingly individualist.

EXCERPT FROM CTS’ RVW

07 // JANELLE MONÁE – THE ELECTRIC LADY

Cindi Mayweather can’t be stopped.

Ambitious, imaginative and immaculately produced to the nines – from the cover art through to the harmonies, ukuleles and hand  percussion – The Electric Lady easily equals and even surpasses 2010’s The Archandroid. Case in point: accusations of a lack of direct human connection beneath the gorgeous layers of sheen (although this arguably speaks to an emotional incapacity on the part of critics. For serious, did you even listen to Cold War people!) are answered in spades. Suite V in particular seems to make the riposte to this criticism its very raison d’etre. A romantic, down-tempo but quietly experimental affair in the most-part, showcasing Monáe’s gorgeous panache for a slow jam (What An Experience and Can’t Live Without Your Love to name two) and ensuring it would hold up as an album in its own stead.

As it is though, it somehow stands only to serve as a delicious dessert to the real treats that make The Electric Lady so damn essential. Case in point: the entire opening half of Suite IV. In  particular, the run from the opening overture through to the Solange featuring title-track contains the finest work of Monáe’s career thus far. It’s an all-out, breathless declaration of her birth right to super-stardom: a series of feminist, queer, funk-ridden, poetic, intensively worked-through, Prince and Erykah Badu featuring excerpts of audacity.

The only real negative to the whole affair, is that it once again raises the ever-frustrating question of Monáe’s lack of enormity.  But as I say, Cindi Mayweather can’t and won’t be stopped. The scale and refined eclecticism on display are incomparable amongst her peers. She’s working towards Purple Rain, What’s Going On, Voodoo, Miseducation of Lauryn Hill status on a stupidly consistent basis. She’ll get there. She’ll dance on your desks. She’ll walk your tightropes. She’ll cut your rugs to shreds. She’ll be back with Suites VI and VII.

06 // APPARAT – KRIEG UND FRIENDEN

 Apparat, aka Sascha Ring, was approached in 2012 by German theatre director Sebastian Hartmann with the lofty task of soundtracking a stage adaptation of Tolstoy’s War and Peace. Out came Krieg und Frieden, a forty-five minute landscape of rangy drone interspersed with Ring’s haunting vocal lines. All these whirs and clicks and little cuts of desolation don’t make for the easiest listening, but so far as atmosphere goes, Krieg und Frieden is a near-perfect exercise in scope, tension and continuity.

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MATTERS

MATTERS // LOVING THE CREW 2

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The stage/blog-post/whatever this is I’m doing with my time is set for Round 2 of Loving the Crew. To introduce you to the ever-growing legion of talented busybodies at AOT towers, every fortnight we’re inviting each to pick their Top 5 moments from the year thus far.

Music, as much as it can be a painstakingly composed craft, a finely-tuned expression of it’s creators talents, experiences, voices in their head, is essentially all about feeling. Sensory engagement from transmission and reception. These are our writers’ attempts to express that engagement at its finest.  

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MATTERS

MATTERS // LOVING THE CREW

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The good ship Arbiter is setting out on brave new seas, and in response to the conch’s call, a hardy crew has assembled.

Reviews, essays and all manner of creativity from this lovely lot will be appearing before you even know it. However, before we get to all of that, it seems pertinent to introduce you to each of them. Over the course of the next few weeks, we’re going to feature a handful of these freshly plucked writers/artists/creators, giving them to chance to spin a few words in order to give you a sense of their individual niches within the grand, Technicolor Arbiter of Taste pillow-fort we’re building.

They’re picking their Top 5 moments of 2013 thus far, plucking the ripest fruit from the tallest branches of everything this spectacular year has offered up so far. An embarrassment of riches has been piled up in near-all musical climes over the last eight months, and so the intention is that – as well as an opportunity for a meet-and-greet – these short lists will be a handy guide for all and sundry within our present Cave of Wonders

Are you sitting comfortably?

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JANUARY RECORD RVWS

FRIGHTENED RABBIT – Pedestrian Verse

“There is light but there’s a tunnel to crawl through”

Emotionally and musically Frightened Rabbit have more often than not been steeped in the working-through of the detritus of life and relationships: exhibited as both a contemplative journey through the motions of melancholy, and bursts of raw, reactionary rage. Yet, with their fourth LP Pedestrian Verse, the emphasis on this working-through has been lifted from that of the seemingly Sisyphean to more of aKübler-Ross process – developing towards an infinitely more resoundingly cathartic working-out.

Appropriately the album kicks off with an answer to the crucial central conundrum of The Winter of Mixed Drinks: “Are you a man or are you a bag of sand?”, and it’s immediately clear that singer and lyricist Scott Hutchison is far more assertive and analytical of his status as the former. The flaws and mistakes that dog those whom he writes of as well as he himself, though certainly not something to be proud of, are approached with forthrightness as the ‘Acts of Man’.

Though in expressing this increasingly mature awareness perhaps some of his characteristically blistering sadness has dissipated, little that made Hutchinson so essential has been lost, and the tone is typically confessional. The specific approach appears to be that the scars of the chips on his shoulders are still there, even if the wounds themselves are healing.

Nowhere however, is the band’s development more evident than at the level of sound. These songs’ production, both creatively and technically, is undeniably far tighter and more cohesive than previously, and every rhythm, chord shift and tempo switch-up has seemingly been thought through back and forth. There’s a meticulousness here which far from appearing in anyway cold or calculated, instead asserts itself as the fruition of craft.

In doing so they’ve quite brilliantly taken the cliché of the consequence of exposure to a major label aesthetic: well-loved indie group horrendously victimised by torturer-cum-producer’s buckets of stifling gloss in some fantastical musical version of Hostel – and instead used it as a mechanism for both refinement and expansion.

Opening tracks ‘Acts of Man’ and ‘Backyard Skull’ in particular embody this, immediately identifiable and engaging, but with touches of experimentation which represent a renewed confidence in their sonic capacities which their song-writing has always promised.

Appropriately, a lot of the record’s reception has commented on this in through the lens of the record’s “focus”, received in both a positive and negative sense – and though I’d fall happily into the camp of the former, there are nonetheless moments where perhaps a looser treatment of the material, with even more space and time would only benefit it. ‘Housing ‘ in both its ‘(In)’ and ‘(Out)’ forms for instance, have all the promise of germinating into glorious anthems, each satisfyingly breaking up the flow of the record with its urgency, but unfortunately they last all to briefly, left as tantalising and consequently all-the-more disappointing saplings.

But these few instances, on a record that fulfils the band’s knack for togetherness epitomised in their live performance better than any previous attempt, stand as the exception that proves the rule. The introspection, the working-through, “the tunnel” is still this particular rabbit’s habitat (an artist whose first album was entitled …Sings the Greys wouldn’t ever switch paths that drastically!), but accompanying the band’s development comes the increasing potential for an ever-realistic, yet all the more attainable for that, hope. The last sound we hear is birdsong. 7.6/10

YO LA TENGO – Fade

It’s impossible not to be slightly daunted by confronting your first album from a band with thirteen full-length LPs from a near thirty-year long career behind them. The accompanying sensation of crushing failure as a wannabe-critic/listener put aside, a plethora of other questions emerge: What am I to expect? Is Fade a good place to begin? If not where is there to go?

Their name is ubiquitous in the indie music sphere, of a similar touchstone standing to The Flaming Lips perhaps, not in sound necessarily but in their status as a cult group with their origins in the 80s maintaining their presence in popular conscious and parlance throughout. The sense is that I should know them, and know them well: Stereogum recently released a fairly comprehensive ‘Worst to Best’, threatening to the uninitiated in its totality.But then again, perhaps it’s the ideal mental-state with which to confront any new music – blissful ignorance perhaps being the closest to objectivity any individual can get.

So it is what with this blank slate I confronted Fade,a title which at this late-stage perhaps threatened to become the dead horse with which lazy/over-exposed reviewers would flagellate the record, the sound of an artist fading to black.

Instead, whilst by the close of the record fading certainly comes to mind, it is of a different kind: into the ether. Grand portions effectively float – calming, delicate, expansively and sumptuously composed. It’s the sound of musicians immensely assured by their craft and equally comfortable at their most outwards-reaching and intricately detailed moments of quiet.

It is perhaps with this sense of comfortable prowess that the record does take a while to settle into an affirmed sense of direction. Whilst the opening salvo all evidently derives from the same source – the dreamy interchange of vocals the characteristic thread which runs throughout – the songs themselves initially knock against each other somewhat, perhaps out of a conscious desire to exhibit an eclectic edge, to try on slightly different aesthetics and determine which will lead the record onwards. The songs themselves are well-weighted and produced, individually ranging from listen-able to borderline great, but as part of the record as a whole the chirpy synths that characterise the straight-forward indie pop of ‘Well You Better’ can’t help but jar with the opening feedback and distortion of ‘Paddle Forward’. Once this slight pacing issue is resolved, however, with the arrival of a later cohesion in tone, the record really begins to shine.

There’s a particular run from ‘I’ll Be Around’ onwards to the close of the album ‘Before We Run’ which hits a glorious groove, the contemplative mood struck upon from the record’s very first chorus (“Cause this is it for all we know / So say good night to me / And lose no more time, no time / Resisting the flow”)fully asserting itself musically. Here the strings and horns in particular are gorgeous – never dominating or particularly distinctive even but honed to perfection – a centrally considered aspect of the songs themselves rather than a veneer.

So it is here with the close that I can answer my earlier questions. What am I to expect? A record of rich structure and composition that expresses the band’s range and mature song-writing with elegance, the mood one of contemplation and a growing sense of calm. Is Fade a good place to begin?Almost undoubtedly, a record that becomes increasingly warm and enveloping, evidently created with care and love and which allows the listener to fully engage in such sentiments themselves. If not where is there to go? I Can Hear the Heart Beating as One perhaps.And Then Nothing Turned Itself Inside-Out after. Maybe anywhere… but right now I’d be quite happy to stay right here. Fade is a treat. 7.8/10

PARQUET COURTS – Light Up Gold

Parquet Courts’ full debut is a thorny beast, wired and twitching with urgency and yet languorous and apathetic, either carved from, or scraped off of, the American backstreets and boulevards they call home.

When at their most tightly wound and rhythmically driving the songs threaten brilliance: the way the riveting garage-rock riffs of ‘Master of My Craft’ run into those of Borrowed Time with a “One, Two, Three, Four” is addictive, bringing a potency and urgency to the album’s movement that befits the rodeo imagery that adorns the cover. It’s a quality which sadly lacks by the record’s second side however, where individual moments of interest begin to clash with an increasing lethargy and monotony, embodying the loss of motivation and listless roaming which serve as recurring motifs. In the wake of the music’s flaws though, and to a fair extent overriding these issues, is the thematic and linguistic prowess of the lyrics.

Post-Punk was born to be this poetic. Throughout, whether delivered by Andrew Savage or Austin Brown, Light Up Gold’slyrics are droll and resonant – equally comfortable in realist romance (“My girl’s a borealis-lit fjord […] My girl is a beer, freshly poured”) or reflections on the dystopic contemporary employment landscape: (“There are no more roles on TV shows, there are no road-cone dispensing jobs […] but there are still careers in combat, my son”). They’re rich at their most prosaic (“I was debating Swedish Fish, roasted peanuts or licorice”) and abstract (“I saw, while squinting, the hidden layer in those lost-era grain elevators”), and they’re the main reason to bookmark this band and return to this record. Tracks like ‘N Dakota’ and ‘Yonder is Closer to the Heart’ are almost better read as prose poems in fact, managing to register an authentic experience of Americana in a style reminiscent of both Jonathon Richman and the Beat poets, but all the same strikingly current and refreshingly individualist.

Ultimately, you find that you can only praise Parquet Courts so far. The melodies and moments of musical captivation they conjure are thrilling, but they feel worn down over the course of the record by a searching, languorous quality that leaves a sense of frustration… and yet you come out feeling completely spoilt and utterly bowled over by their sublime lyrical-work. But a contradictory response seems to be the only valid option: it’s a surprisingly complex record produced by a surprisingly complex band, a quartet of Pioneers/Stoners looking at the stars whilst lying in the gutter. 6.5/10 

THE JOY FORMIDABLE – Wolf’s Law

The Joy Formidable’s ambitions towards the gorging, gorgeous maximum, the evident end-goal of 2011’s The Big Roar, are matched in force by panoramic production this time around, evidenced by the epic multitude of strings on final track ‘Turnaround’ undoubtedly going some way to fulfilling their mostUse Your Illusion of musical dreams.

Unfortunately, with this outward reach the heart of the band, and particularly Ritzy Bryan’s vocals, get somewhat lost in the mix, struggling to be heard amongst the tides of orchestration and polish.

This is particularly striking when it becomes quite clear the songs themselves strike out on a similar prog-pop territory and structure to their debut The Big Roar, and for all the appeal of the hugeness on display, it is the moments of directness, the very distilled essence of the band, that are still their main strength. The brute force of ‘Cholla’ and ‘The Leopard and the Lung’ (which captures some of ‘Whirring’s chiming brilliance) are the kind of hefty chunks of guitar-music, delivered with power and panache and coming to a festival near you, that could reignite that particular flame in the popular sphere. Here’s hoping. 6.2/10

LOCAL NATIVES – Hummingbird 

Matching the production habitat switch from SoCal to Brooklyn, on Hummingbird the sunshine of Local Natives early singles has dimmed a little, overtly evidenced by their distinctive harmonies being withdrawn to a flavour rather than a trope. Yet, wonderfully, the songs are still tight and sonically rich, the vocals are warm, confident in their delivery and enveloping, and a particular highlight is the unsung drumwork of Matt Frazier, possessing the crucial snap and drive these songs need.

Producer Aaron Dessner’s style seems to be to step back and give these songs the space they need, but his influence does come to rear its head, perhaps most pointedly in the textures: occasional bouts of sombre piano, and the horns in particular have a large degree of that High Violet melancholy hanging in the air around them. The ultimate effect is that frequently, the songs are even stronger on tracks like ‘Black Spot’ and ‘Columbia’ for their subdued nature: tense with piano and rising reverb until the clouds part and glorious light pours in. It’s the story of a record that possesses more consistency, gravitas and raw edge than its predecessor, whilst maintaining that which made Gorilla Manor so compelling. A sterling record.  8.2/10

 

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