Tuesday, December 7, 2010

Album Stream: Diane Birch with the Phenomenal Handclap Band - The Velveteen Age EP (S-Curve Records, 2010)


Stream Diane Birch with the Phenomenal Handclap Band's entire new EP The Velveteen Age at AOL's website (available until December 13).

“During my teenage years as a Goth these songs were amongst my nearest and dearest,” says Birch, who appears in one of her vintage Victorian wedding dresses at age 16 in the photo on the EP cover. “Sitting in my bedroom with my headphones pressed into my ears till they hurt, each song gave me a weird kind of hope for my future. I would have never imagined I would get a chance to record them one day, let alone with some of my closest friends.”

The daughter of a conservative pastor, Birch was only allowed to listen to church hymns growing up. She rebelled as a young teen by embracing Goth culture, attending her father's services in a floor-length black cape and vintage wedding dress, and listening to bands like Sisters of Mercy, Peter Murphy, and Echo & The Bunnymen. On ‘The Velveteen Age,’ Birch covers these and other artists with affection, exultation and a wicked backbeat courtesy of the members of the Phenomenal Handclap Band.

'The Velveteen Age' was recorded in Brooklyn, between songwriting sessions for Diane’s next album of original material. It follows her extraordinary debut album 'Bible Belt’ (S-Curve/2009), which opened in the Billboard Top 100 and earned glowing reviews from The New York Times, NPR, Rolling Stone, Vanity Fair and more. Birch toured extensively and made numerous television appearances supporting ‘Bible Belt,’ including The Today Show, Letterman, and Ellen.


- DianeBirch.com

I Am Forever Indebted to Jack White

Because he introduces me to bands like Love: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BSUoYHEJCGI

How am I only hearing this band now? Actually, the answer to that question is because I haven't been curious as to whether or not the White Stripes' version of "My Little Red Book" was a cover until now. It turns out the Stripes' version is a cover; in fact, their version is a cover of a cover: "My Little Red Book" was originally written by the classic song-writing team of Burt Bacharach and Hal David (performed by Bacharach), a favourite of both Jack's and Meg's. I guess it's even less surprising that the White Stripes covered "My Little Red Book."

Saturday, December 4, 2010

Diane Birch - Bible Belt (S-Curve Records, 2009); The Velveteen Age EP Preview

One of the greatest feelings is getting so totally blown away by a new artist that you get goosebumps. Exactly one year ago, that artist for me was a young pianist/singer-songwriter named Diane Birch.

Born in Michigan in 1983, Diane spent most of her childhood in Zimbabwe and Australia where her father worked as a Christian preacher. By the time she was ten, her family had settled in Portland, Oregon, and she had already been learning piano for three years.

Despite Diane's experiences abroad, her sound is quite western. Such is unsurprising as her parents disapproved of secular music and thus exposed her mostly to opera, classical music and hymns. What is surprising, however, is that despite no longer being sheltered from popular music (or popular culture in general), Diane's sound has not deviated much from the styles she has grown up listening to. Indeed, her modern gospel draws endless comparisons to the very legends who influenced her such as Carole King and the Carpenters.

Diane Birch flawlessly blends soul, gospel, R&B and folk on her debut album Bible Belt (2009): "Choo Choo" is a jumpy, key-filled rocker; loungy tracks like lead-single "Nothing But a Miracle" and "Forgiveness" call to mind classic, sultry chanteuses such as Nancy Sinatra. Diane also displays some modern pop sensibilities: fans of sweet, simple, sing-along pop songs, like Feist’s smash hit "1234," may instantly fall in love with "Valentino," named after Birch’s imaginary childhood friend.

Despite Bible Belt’s title, the album is no bible-thumping exaltation of the Lord: "bible belt" refers to Diane's self-described restrictive religious upbringing. Yet, Bible Belt is not an anti-religious album either; rather, Diane addresses finding one’s own path in life - breaking away from her religious roots and discovering what else is in the world. She expresses this idea most explicitly in the jazzy "Rise Up" in which she advises listeners to "wise up to the stories [they]'ve been told." Diane also addresses the difficulties of trying to carve out one’s own path in life: "Fools / Knockin' on my door / Callin' out my name / Tellin' me to change my ways," she sings on the feisty "Fools."

Diane is not completely confident in her newfound secularism, however. Moments of self-doubt surface in the introspective "Mirror Mirror" ("Mirror, mirror, is it me or you that's lying? / Mirror, mirror, is it me or you that's crying? / You know I try / But I can't hold my head up high").

Although Bible Belt is loaded with hits, the album's real centrepiece - the real sparkling gem that makes Bible Belt the great album it is - is not any individual song but Diane's voice, one of the most gorgeous, arresting voices I have ever heard. From whisper to gentle coo to full-on barn-burning shout, Diane can hit all the notes, giving Bible Belt a pleasant varying intensity.

Since Bible Belt’s release, Diane Birch has graced countless magazine covers, performed on most of the major North American daytime and late night talk shows, toured the world and served as the opening act on Nick Jonas and the Administration's Who I Am tour. Before she even had a record deal, she had gained Prince's endorsement: after having watched one of her gigs during her days as a pianist-for-hire at a hotel in Hollywood, Prince invited her to his mansion to jam and eat egg sandwiches just so he could "check out" this new talent.

This Tuesday, one year and three days after Diane Birch first blew me away on The Tonight Show with Conan O'Brien, she will return with a brand new EP The Velveteen Age. Among the EP's seven new tracks will be covers of songs by Gothic post-punk legends Joy Division, the Cure, Siouxsie & the Banshees and Echo & the Bunnymen. We have heard her cover the Beatles, Hall & Oates, Tom Petty and even Haddaway, but her new covers, being of artists of such drastically differing styles, have the potential to be her most interesting covers yet.

Tuesday, October 19, 2010

Zoe Boekbinder - Artichoke Perfume (self-released, 2009)

A month ago, a couple of friends and I went out for a laid back drink at the Cafe Deux Soleils here in Vancouver. We didn't expect to have stumbled upon what I later found out wasn't an open-mic act but an actual show by Oakland, California-born musician Zoe Boekbinder.

The crowd was small and intimate, perfectly befitting of Zoe's music which I did not expect to mesmerize me as much as it did. She's not a typical girl-with-acoustic-guitar act; she has a really unique voice and really knows how to stretch her vowels. Her songs are fun and quirky, light and fluffy, although her quirkiness tends to translate into stage-banter that lasts too long. She also uses a loop-pedal to create cool vocal harmonies.

One thing I really like about Zoe Boekbinder is that she incorporates some carnivalesque elements into her songs. "Adventures of Turtle and Seahorse," for example, clearly shows this continuing influence from her days in Vermillion Lies, her pseudo-cabaret duo with her sister Kim.

In addition to Zoe Boeknbinder's self-released debut album Artichoke Perfume, she also has a seven-song EP called Awkward Like Cut Melon that's worth checking out.

Saturday, September 25, 2010

Sunday, September 12, 2010

Album Stream: The Vaselines - Sex with an X (Sub Pop, 2010)

Scottish twee-pop-pioneers the Vaselines return with their second album Sex with an X, their first album since 1990's Dum Dum. Due September 14 via Sub Pop Records, Sex with an X is streaming in full for two more days at the Guardian.co.uk.

Expectedly, in the twenty years since the Vaselines' first and only album, the band has made some pretty significant strides away from its innocent twee-pop days. Such is obvious right away with the snarling opening track "Ruined," with its twisted guitar-noise-feedback, and "The Devil's Inside Me," which features the same hazy, languid, pseudo-psych riff that you might hear on an early Dandy Warhols' album (although the Vaselines' riff is more brooding than psychedelic). The Vaselines also let their guitar-chops show perhaps more than ever, delving into classic rock with the plodding riff of "Overweight But Over You" and the essentially country rocker "My God's Bigger Than Your God."

But don't get the wrong idea: The Vaselines haven't totally "grown up"; the simple, sunny tunes are still here. The title-track features their typically straightforward lyrics ("It feels so good, it must be bad for me / Let's do it, let's do it again," frontman Eugene Kelly sings). The Vaselines also retain their playfulness with their humourous, Duran Duran-"name-dropping" dig at the 80s, obtusely titled "I Hate the 80s" (ironically, the Sex with an X track "Mouth to Mouth" sounds very 80s).

If you're new to the Vaselines, Sex with an X is actually a good starting point, regardless of the fact that your choices are limited. They play a bit more technically now (by which I mean they play more than just a few chords), but never do they sound like they've abandoned their original sound in order to stay relevant. Sex with an X is a great album in its own right, but it's even more impressive as a come-back album after twenty years away from the studio.

Kings of Leon - "Radioactive" (single) (RCA Records, 2010)

Have Kings of Leon become the new U2 or Coldplay? "Radioactive," the surprisingly catchy and overall good first single from their upcoming fifth album Come Around Sundown is not totally redeeming. Like U2 and Coldplay, Kings of Leon still seem capable of creating a good hook but slather on arena-sized amounts of reverb to make the song sound unnecessarily huge. But regardless of that minor fault, "Radioactive" is still good enough to make me want to check out Kings of Leon's new album. I also still rather enjoy their album titles and quite dig their svelte new motif:

Album Stream: Superchunk - Majesty Shredding (Merge Records, 2010)

Only two days left to stream 90s indie rock stalwarts Superchunk's latest album Majesty Shredding at NPR.org. Majesty Shredding is the band's first album since 2001's Here's to Shutting Up.

Monday, September 6, 2010

Interview: Pete International Airport

Great interview with the Dandy Warhols' guitarist Pete "International Airport" Holmstrom by the Portland Mercury.

It's always interesting to hear form Pete. I've always considered him the silent, most level-headed Dandy, and his opinions on the Dandy Warhols' recent material and his sentiments towards the band's creative process proves it. It's good to see that at least one member of the Dandy Warhols hasn't been down with the band's last two albums and thinks that having all the time and digital tools in the world to create is not necessarily a luxury. Hopefully, the Dandy Warhols will follow Pete's prescription for their future albums.

Pete International Airport releases his debut self-titled solo album on September 21 via Custom Made Music.

Wednesday, September 1, 2010

Free Download: The National Trust - "The National Trust: The Album (The National Trust, 2010)

http://www.nationaltrust.org.uk/main/w-vh/w-visits/w-events-sounds/

This year, the National Trust for Places of Historic Interest or Natural Beauty collaborated with former Pulp frontman Jarvis Cocker to produce an album of sounds recorded at eleven of Britain's historically significant sites.

I don't know if The National Trust: The Album can be considered field recordings - my basic understanding of field recordings is that they strictly capture non-human-made sounds - but many of The National Trust's tracks feature sounds such as human footsteps, a music box, billiards being shot and doors opening, all of which were likely coordinated. But The National Trust features enough natural sounds such as birds chirping and waves gently undulating that I personally consider it to be an album of field recordings.

The tracks are short, ranging from thirty-three seconds to three minutes, sixteen seconds (the whole album is just shy of twenty-six minutes) and diverse enough to keep listeners' interest. So, if you want a short, relaxing and, above all, interesting listen, The National Trust: The Album might just be for you.

Sunday, August 29, 2010

The Dead Weather - Sea of Cowards (Third Man Records, 2010)

When the Dead Weather released “Die by the Drop” and “Old Mary” together as the first single from their then-unreleased second album Sea of Cowards, I'd read criticisms that Jack White had started to run out of ideas. I’d read pleads – demands, even – for Jack to ditch the “nĂ¼ metal bullshit” that was the Dead Weather and, more specifically, “Die By the Drop” and return to the blues-inspired garage rock and pop melodies that made him famous in the White Stripes. I would love nothing more than for Jack to re-commit to the White Stripes full-time, and admittedly, “Die By the Drop” is a little histrionic (especially Jack’s vocals and the song’s ogreish riff), but regardless, I still quite dig the song.

That said, my confidence in Jack has been shaken in other ways. I won't discuss them all here, but most topically, in interviews prior to Sea of Cowards’ release, Jack marveled at the Dead Weather for having created an album that was heavier and bluesier than he ever imagined the band could have been. I would have thought that Jack, however, of all people – so in tune with the blues and whose entire career has been built on the blues – would have known that hard rock and the blues are incidental, not correlative.

I didn’t agree at all with the above-mentioned criticism that Jack was losing his creative mind until I heard the first track from Sea of Cowards “Blue Blood Blues.” The track opens with distorted guitars followed by equally distorted dual vocals by Jack and Kills-singer Alison "VV"Mosshart. Although I’m always particularly interested in hearing how Jack’s singing changes on each record, for the first time ever, on “Blue Blood Blues,” Jack’s vocals just come off as cheesy and lame. The same can be said about everything from the song’s dated keyboard effects to its tacky background “oohs."

Thankfully, “Blue Blood Blues” seamlessly transitions into the more palatable “Hustle and Cuss.” Opening with a cool, unhurried bass line by “Little” Jack Lawrence, which, along with sensible flourishes of keys by Dean Fertita, tempers the song’s riff, “Hustle and Cuss” is perhaps the most traditional song on the album.

The control and good pace heard on “Hustle and Cuss” is short-lived, however, disappearing in favour of an instrumental breakdown on “The Difference between Us” which, while less spastic than on “Blue Blood Blues,” still sounds too busy and unfocused.

Following another seamless transition is the cacophonous and amusingly titled “I’m Mad,” possibly the most self-indulgent moment/mess on the album. As Alison laughs and repeats the lyrics “I’m mad”; as Dean jams on the keyboards; and as the rest of the band joins in on the clamour, I begin to wonder how long the band took to write this song or this album in general. For the first (but not the last) time, with “I’m Mad,” Sea of Cowards crosses into vapid obnoxiousness.

The volume and aggression continue on the next track “Die by the Drop” after which the band finally slows down on “I Can’t Hear You.” Consider “I Can’t Hear You” “Hang You from the Heavens, Pt. 2,” only whereas Alison sounded genuinely threatening on “Heavens” – frustrated at unreciprocated love and pissed off – here, despite her snarling gusto, she is seemingly defanged and milked of her venom for good measure.

Despite these several plodding, over-fired moments, Sea of Cowards does have its bright moments besides “Hustle and Cuss” and “Die by the Drop” (or at least moments that have a lot of potential). “Gasoline” is great if only for its keyboard lines. Its rapid, single-note key line lays the foundation for many cool potential interludes; however, premature guitar solos spoil that potential by entering only a minute into the two-minute, forty-five-second song. The White-led “Looking at the Invisible Man” might be a decent track, if it was slowed down to a “Blue Veins”-like, oil-lamp crooner and if his vocals were not completely effaced by guitar-and key-effects and if the track was not marred by a squealing, incongruous quagmire of instrument jams. “Jawbreaker” probably has the coolest, most forceful opening on the album before launching into an electronic, partially staccato gallop.

Finally, following "Jawbreaker" is album-closer “Old Mary." Here, Jack’s vocals are distorted but this time in a constructive way. A ringing background buzzer that seems to inform listeners of “technical difficulties” adds to the sense that Jack’s vocals were sung through a radio or telephone receiver. A creepy piano line, quick blasts of screeching, grinding-gear guitars, a clacking of drumsticks, sound bytes of giggling children and a transition from piano to organ make “Old Mary” one of the Dead Weather’s most unique and interesting tracks. “Old Mary” is also one of Sea of Cowards’ best-paced, best built-up songs and concludes with an instrumental break-down that, for once on this album, does not sound self-indulgent. Despite the uniqueness and quality of “Old Mary,” however, the song does not come across as a great closer; it really feels more like a mid-album tune-up. But with it, the Dead Weather ends Sea of Cowards on their strongest possible note.

Sea of Cowards features more keys, more effects and more distortion than its 2009 predecessor Horehound, but rarely do any of those elements feel necessary. Rather, the endless solos and jams feel as though they have been plastered all over the album for the sake of seeing how quickly and loudly the band could play. Often, this endeavour comes at the expense of being unable to hear Jack's or Alison’s voices with any clarity. The Dead Weather relentlessly bludgeons listeners with heavy song after heavy song, taking no time to develop any of their songs. Songs don’t have to be slow in order to exhibit good craftsmanship, but absent on Cowards are the “60 Feet Tall”s, “I Cut Like a Buffalo”s and “Will There Be Enough Water”s, that is, songs with soul. In order to create truly monumental heavy-hitters, the band would have benefited not necessarily from slowing down their songs but definitely from giving its songs more room to maneuver so that their harmonies, solos and instrumental build-ups and breakdowns feel relevant.

Jack is known for his speedy creation of records, but never until now have any of them sounded rushed. What has ultimately resulted as Sea of Cowards is an album that is too busy, too unfocused, poorly paced and manages to be a colossal, albeit (at only thirty-six minutes long) compact, mess. I get that anger, aggression, attitude, dark themes, dark hair and dark clothing are the Dead Weather’s M.O., but I never imagined that the band’s musical or visual style would have become so one-dimensional and so boring so quickly. Sea of Cowards’ biggest problem is that it lacks any sort of restraint; nothing holds together the individual members’ parts which results in a lack of focus and direction.

I always respect and admire Jack's work-within-the-box philosophy, but I respect and admire his efforts to push his self-imposed restrictions as far as possible even more, even if, such as in the case of Sea of Cowards, he pushes himself into territories I don’t particularly like. That respect and admiration notwithstanding, I really hope "lack of cohesion" within the band in a more general sense will be the exact factor that allows Jack to take his attention off of the Dead Weather and re-invest his creative energies in the White Stripes full-time sooner rather than later.

Best Coast - Crazy for You (Mexican Summer, 2010)

Hear for yourself. Pretty safe to call this my favourite album of 2010.

Michael Hurley & Betsy Nichols - River in the Rain 7"

Michael Hurley's & Betsy Nichols' entirely acoustic 7" River in the Rain starts with "Jocko's Lament," a fifty-seven-second a capella duet followed by the title track and "Don't Let Me Down." The two latter tracks could easily pass as male-led outtakes of the many country and jazz standard covers from Sarah Harmer's 1999 debut album Songs for Clem. Further to the similarity is Betsy Nichols' voice which totally sounds like Sarah's throughout the 7". "Knockando" concludes the ten-minute 7" with a Jason Collett style sing-along which might also appeal to Hayden fans.

The whole 7" is entirely guitar-and-voice and may also appeal to Smog and early Mountain Goats fans, with its lo-fi, unaccompanied production and intimacy.

Friday, June 18, 2010

There's Only One Elf Power Song I Like,

But this is a pretty sweet album cover. Their new self-titled album comes out September 14.

Monday, June 14, 2010

Like Nine Inch Nails?

Like free stuff in general? If you answered yes to either question, download How to Destroy Angels' free self-titled EP straight from the band's website.

How to Destroy Angels is Nine Inch Nails-founder/front man Trent Reznor, his wife Mariqueen Maandig and British composer and producer Atticus Ross. How to Destroy Angels (The Null Corporation, 2010) is the band's first official release.

Imagine a less ferocious Nine Inch Nails with lo-fi female vocals. Those are about the extents of the differences between How to Destroy Angels and Nine Inch Nails. The bands' similarities include the sounds of industrial grinding on "Parasite," the glitchy electronic effects on "BBB" and "The Believer" and the very precise drumming best demonstrated on "Parasite" and "Fur Lined." How to Destroy Angels also exudes a dark ambience, such as with the sparse piano line of "A Drowning" which sounds almost identical to the one that forms the backbone of With Teeth closer "Right Where it Belongs." Maandig even sings like Trent Reznor, most notably on "The Believers," with her disturbed, hushed vocals and equally despairing lyrics.

Given the myriad similarities between How to Destroy Angels' debut EP and Nine Inch Nails' overall discography, How to Destroy Angels is sure to please most Nine Inch Nails fans or at least satiate them until Trent Reznor formally releases new music under his Nine Inch Nails moniker.

Thursday, May 20, 2010

“Neighbourhood Social Scene”

I admit I was initially lukewarm on the concept behind The Happiness Project, the first solo album by Broken Social Scene- and Do Make Say Think-founder Charles Spearin. After having heard the first available sample “Mrs. Morris” (which, in retrospect, is more than “just an intro track”), I was ready to pass on the album entirely. But thank God I didn’t, because Charles Spearin offers a surprisingly mellifluous and successful experiment in re-contextualizing the tones of every-day speech.

Spearin derives most of The Happiness Project’s melodies from the rhythms of every day speech which he found in interviews he conducted with several of his neighbours ranging from children to the elderly (the interviews were loosely based on the subject of happiness; hence the album’s title). The dependence on spoken rhythms for melodies leads to some rather unpredictable and unique melodies and interludes. Eventually, the “lyrics” start to blend with the music and begin to sound like they are sung, even though it is the spoken words that dictate the time changes and melodies rather than vice-versa (hear the choral lyrics “It’s like they don’t ask beyond of what’s present” in “Anna”). Refreshingly, Spearin avoids the tediously long, droning ambience of too many experimental albums. Quite oppositely, with a mere run-time of thirty-one minutes, forty-nine seconds, The Happiness Project is an ideal album for quick, repeated listens.

The most satisfying aspect of The Happiness Project is that despite contributions from Kevin Drew, Evan Cranley and Justin Small, the album does not sound like any of their other projects (Broken Social Scene, Stars and Do Make Say Think, respectively). The only exception is “Mr. Gowrie” which recalls the more ambient moments on Broken Social Scene’s Feel Good Lost and B-sides collection Bee Hives. Nor are Spearin’s own contributions to his other projects immediately clear on The Happiness Project, an accomplishment which eluded both Kevin Drew and Brendan Canning on their respective solo albums (or perhaps an accomplishment which neither artist endeavoured to achieve). For creating an album that is distinctly Charles Spearin, and, most importantly, for taking on and delivering with such perfection a concept as original as the one behind The Happiness Project, Charles Spearin deserves to be commended, especially during a time when experimentation and creating an individual artistic identity have become increasingly difficult.

Tuesday, May 18, 2010

Interpol - "Lights" (Capitol Records, 2010)

As I’d mentioned in my previous post, Interpol recently finished recording its fourth album. That album doesn’t have a title yet, but the band has already released one song, the brooding, deliberate “Lights.” While “Lights” doesn’t exhibit the orchestral approach that the band has alluded to in interviews (not a surprising approach, considering frontman Paul Banks’ string-laden solo album and Carlos D.’s increasing forays into film scores, likely the sort of work he left the band to further pursue), “Lights” does revisit the band’s Bright Lights-era subtlety and attention to song-craft which the band has promised in even earlier interviews.

Despite these allusions/promises, I remain wary of the hope that “Lights” provides. After all, “Pioneer to the Falls,” which opens Our Love to Admire, is one of the best post-Bright Lights songs Interpol has written, yet the rest of Our Love to Admire displays Interpol at its worst (so far).

Addendum: Interpol's new logo is fucking rad.

Download "Lights" for free here.

Sunday, May 16, 2010

(Next) Exit Carlos

So, Carlos Dengler (or “Carlos D.”) has left Interpol. Well, that just adds more incentive to stop caring about Interpol, or at least to stop caring as much. For me, this incentive already began with their largely mediocre third album Our Love to Admire which was released three years ago.

Usually, when bands change members, especially so late into their careers, it’s for the worst. Sure, Sonic Youth made its best albums after a seemingly endless search for a drummer, but Steve Shelley permanently filled that role during the art-punk pioneers’ formative years. By 2010, nearly eight years after Interpol released its modern classic debut album Turn on the Bright Lights, no matter whom Interpol recruits to replace Carlos, Interpol will never be the same band that was so integral to my formative years (of music-discovery).

I don’t know if it was the lofty, spacious production on Turn on the Bright Lights that made the album sound so timeless and even almost celestial at times or if it was just the quality or style of Carlos’ bass-playing (perhaps it was a combination of all three), but Carlos D. was the first bassist to have ever really made me appreciate the bass. It was Carlos’ clearly plucked notes, unobscured by the rest of the band’s instruments or Paul Bank’s melancholy tenor, that I’ll always remember having fallen asleep to in altered states throughout high school.

While Carlos stayed in the band long enough to finish recording its new, currently untitled album, he won’t be joining Paul et al. on their follow-up tour. Instead, the band has already announced that it has “some very exciting new recruits” joining them on the road. Sounds good, but I’m not holding my breath.

Despite my wariness, however, and despite my earlier sentiments about bands changing their line-ups and that perhaps it’s time to stop caring about Interpol, I owe a lot to the band. After all, Interpol was one of the first indie bands I listened to, after Beck and Radiohead drew me away from classic rock, which in turn drew me away from nĂ¼ metal and rap-rock. For that reason alone, I know that no matter how bad Interpol may get, and no matter how strong my pre-conceptions of their new music may be, I’m always going to keep up with Interpol's work, Carlos or no Carlos.

Wednesday, May 12, 2010

The Dead Weather to Appear on Twilight: Eclipse Soundtrack

With an exclusive track called "Rolling in on a Burning Tire." This news pretty much sets the tone of my upcoming review of the Dead Weather's new album Sea of Cowards.

Monday, May 10, 2010

Do Make Say Think - Other Truths (Arts & Crafts, 2009)

Breaking through in the early 2000s as part of the third wave of post-rock, Toronto's mostly instrumental outfit Do Make Say Think have become a crown jewel of Canadian alternative rock and one of the most popular post-rock bands today.

DMST take self-titling to a whole new level on their sixth album Other Truths by naming the album’s four tracks "Do," Make," "Say" and "Think," respectively. Although Other Truths features the fewest number of songs on a Do Make album yet, brevity is not the adjective to describe this album. Other Truths is the band’s shortest album to date, but it still clocks in at approximately forty-three minutes.

Other Truths blasts off with the rocket-fueled "Do," as a gently finger-picked melody dabbed with audible fretboard-slides quickly gives way to a meteor shower of instruments. One by one, electric guitars, bass and increasingly thunderous drums plummet from the sky like space shrapnel burning up on re-entry. "Do" is gripping and overpowering; however, it essentially conforms to the false-finish/climax formula that typifies most post-rock.

The last three minutes of "Do" coast into the subtle drum-work of "Make" which may appeal to fans of the band’s earlier, more jazz-infused albums. Here, experimental folk-rockers Akron/Family reprise their role as vocalists from Do Make Say Think's previous album You, You're a History in Rust (still the only vocalists to ever appear on a DMST album), before "Make" skyrockets to uncharted territories.

"Make" concludes with a winding, horn-driven transition into "Say" where, in contrast to the epic brass battalion featured so prominently on the two previous tracks, determined drums direct a cast of doleful, climactic horns. The track’s dramatic sombreness works perfectly as a soundtrack to a band preparing for war, consciously marching in as underdogs.

As DMST enter an un-winnable situation, plaintive vocals lull the track to a quiet close, and the scene plays out in slow motion as it fades to black. From here, the quietest stretch on Other Truths begins and continues until the album ends. It is difficult to recall if DMST have ever sounded so distant, with such sparse, barely noticeable drums.

It took me a long time to like or even come to terms with Other Truths. The sudden change from torrential to introspective jarred me, and I was disappointed that the pace and mood seemed to have steadily declined after the first track. But the more I listened to Other Truths, the less the songs seemed to have been "stuck in middling positions, unsure of their courses" or "easily fade[d] into background music," as I’d had to backspace. Like a lot of other post-rock, Other Truths can be a little difficult to digest – even boring, at least upon the first few listens. But certainly as far as track and album lengths go, post-rock can get a lot worse than Other Truths.