pretentiousfuckwits...

...or how I learned to stop worrying and love the troll.
Feb 16
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Sufjan Stevens - The Avalanche

Asthmatic Kitty, 2006

You’re a painter. You paint landscapes, mainly. The paintings are beautiful and extremely detail: you use the thinnest brush you have to individually paint in each blade of grass. Your paintings are full of life: there’s often a herd of deer dancing in the background, the trees are filled with birds, mice hide in between the bushes. Your paintings are vibrant, painted with the brightest of colours so that, when you cover your studio with them, it feels like you’re in the middle of summer, even at night. What amazes people the most is that you don’t even live in the countryside—you live in inner-city Chicago. Your days are filled with the choking fumes of mid-day traffic. People ask how you manage to draw such detailed pictures without a reference, but you don’t understand—all you have to do is close your eyes, and the pictures are right there, even more beautiful than you can ever realise. You slowly build up a small following, getting places in some major galleries, but you don’t really like the attention.

Your brother died a year or two ago. The police said it was an accidental death—but you’re not so sure. He was always such a good boatsmans, and he always wore his life jacket. It just doesn’t seem possible. Somehow, he keeps appearing in your pictures. Your brother is there, drowning in the lake, his body soaking in the harsh blue water. You don’t know how, you swear you don’t draw him. Sometimes you swear you didn’t even mean to draw water, but his body is still there, floating in the river, wearing his blood-red Arcade Fire tee shirt. In your heart, although you try not to think about it, you know it was probably suicide.

You draw another parade of rabbits, hopping across the front of the forest.

5/5

Reviewed by David.

Tracklist:

  1. The Avalanche
  2. Dear Mr. Supercomputer
  3. Adlai Stevenson
  4. The Vivian Girls Are Visited in the Night by Saint Dargarius and His Squadron of Benevolent Butterflies
  5. Chicago (Acoustic Version)
  6. The Henney Buggy Band
  7. Saul Bellow
  8. Carlyle Lake
  9. Springfield, or Bobby Got a Shadfly Caught in His Hair
  10. The Mistress Witch from McClure (Or, the Mind that Knows Itself)
  11. Kaskaskia River
  12. Chicago (Adult Contemporary Easy Listening Version)
  13. Inaugural Pop Music for Jane Margaret Byrne
  14. No Man’s Land
  15. The Palm Sunday Tornado Hits Crystal Lake
  16. The Pick-Up
  17. The Perpetual Self, or What Would Saul Alinsky Do?
  18. For Clyde Tombaugh
  19. Chicago (Multiple Personality Disorder Version)
  20. Pittsfield
  21. The Undivided Self (For Eppie and Popo)

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Feb 04
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Owls - Owls


Jade Tree, 2001

Please excuse my hyperbole, but the split up of Cap’n Jazz in 1995 was the worst thing that has ever happened to modern music. You might surely be snapping your heads back in wild amazement, or asking, “Who?” but so long as we agree that I’m correct now, we can save ourselves a bit of time. Cap’n Jazz only released one album—Schmap’n Schmazz*—and later an anthology, and it’s a damn shame. Because, you see, they were the second wave of emo—after the initial hardcore scene and before today’s dilution of the term—and one can only speculate that if they’d stuck around a little longer, got a bit more well known, well, we might not just have to suffer guyliner. Let’s be clear, while many people would vomit all over a My Chemical Romance CD (and argue it improved the sound), I personally don’t care about their success or not—no-one’s pouring it into my ears, after all. But guyliner is awful. And seriously, you have to apply it to the waterline, not just daub it around your sockets so you look like a WWF charity case. C’mon.

Clearly, someone else told this to the band, and so we got Owls. The original line-up of Cap’n Jazz (brothers Tim Kinsella and Mike Kinsella [on vocals and drums, respectively], along with guitarist Victor Villareal and bassist Sam Zurick) are all present and correct. But that’s not to say this is just a reunion, because while Tim’s screeching voice still floats over the instrumentation, that’s the only readily-identifiable mark of Cap’n Jazz’s ghost on the album.

That little metaphor there wasn’t just for giggles. The word ghost might be extreme, but in many ways this album is like a grandad. Not your grandad, the senile pensioner who has to be spoon-fed, or your grandad, the old war veteran who’s convinced you’re a fag, but your grandad, you: the one who tells rambling and incoherent stories about breaking into Southend Football Club and drinking the kegs dry, and gives you £1 after he’s done. And sure, it’s only a quid, but bless him, he tried.

This album is a mess from the word go: you get the odd feeling that a dim-witted naturist was sent to cover footage of owls, and after a series of convoluted mistakes ended up stalking the members of Owls. Hilarity ensued. Each part of the music—the vocals, the guitar, the bass, the drums—could have easily been recorded separately and then slapped together in the studio by a savant audio mixer, who then promptly disappeared from the world leaving only a pair of soiled Airwalks. It’s a wonderfully discordant collision of sounds and lyrics that probably causes faux-musique scholars to spit out their quills and moan about the lack of form and structure and then months later start prattling on about Serialism, because if you’re gonna suck the fun out of music you might as well go the whole hog.

If there was one song that represented this album, it would be middle track Everyone Is My Friend. The drums explode onto the song seconds before an indifferent guitar riff plays to the side, like it wasn’t even bothered about doing this anyway, gawwwd. Tim Kinsella howls over it, unbelieving of the concept of harmonies, and sings lyrics so long-winded and completely isolated from each other that you begin to suspect he’s singing in senyru’s, each one perfectly describing teenage life:

I know it must
be rough, you’re so much smarter
than your friends.


and screaming over the line I’VE BEEN INVENTING YOU, AND CONTINUE INVENTING YOU, a line like a hundred others on the album sounds like it could mean something but fuck it, we’ve got a song to play here and there’s no time for that introspective shit. The bass chugs along the whole time, as if it’s completely unaware of the soul-searching that’s apparently going on, a jumbled guitar riff sounds out, apparently stumbling in lost from another song. And then, it doesn’t even have the decency to finish properly, the song just stopping like the sound recorder passed out from a whisky-induced coma, vomiting all over the controls. It’s amazing.

If you’ll allow me another tortured metaphor, and you will because you like them secretly, it’s a lot like strawberry cheesecake. I mean, you know the biscuits go with the cheese, you know the cream goes with the strawberries, and to an extent you can understand why the biscuit tastes nice with the strawberries as well. But why, why, why, does the cheese go with the strawberry? You’d never eat them together normally, and yet here you are: apparently perfectly sane and eating cheese with strawberries. And in a similar fashion, you can tell the vocals go with the guitar, the guitar lays nicely over the bass, and the bass ties in well with the drums. But there’s some logical disconnect between the drums and the vocals that never quite fixes itself, leaving you with a feeling that something is wrong, but godammit, it’s cheesecake, and cheesecake tastes delicious.

In summary, if you like cheesecake, you’ll like this. If you don’t like cheesecake, well, no-one wanted your opinion anyway.

1/0

*AKA: Burritos, Inspiration Point, Fork Balloon Sports, Cards in the Spokes, Automatic Biographies, Kites, Kung Fu, Trophies, Banana Peels We’ve Slipped on and Egg Shells We’ve Tippy Toed Over

Reviewed by David

Track List

1. What Whorse You Wrote Id On
2. Anyone Can Have A Good Time
3. I Want The Quiet Moments of a Party Girl
4. Everyone Is My Friend
5. I Want The Blindingly Cute To Confide In Me
6. For Nate’s Brother Whose Name I Never Knew or Can’t Remember
7. Life in the Hair Salon-Themed Bar on the Island
8. Holy Fucking Ghost

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Feb 03
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Diane Cluck - Monarcana


Very Friendly, 2006

This album is like the bleeding heart of lost America, oozing desperation and dust out of its aorta, letting the thick blood pour onto sand, not because it’s dying, but because that’s the only thing left for it to do. Diane Cluck started off as somewhat of an alternative and watered down Regina Spektor, and yet this album was recorded from 2001-2004, overlaying her musical output at the time. Like the sculpture in Drawing Restraint 9, this is the waste product of a bigger project, yet its value is far greater than would be expected: Diane Cluck manages to sculpt it into a petroleum jelly bast of the 21st Century’s mind.

That’s not to say the lyrics are a zeitgest to our Id’s, as might be expected. Unlike Cluck’s usual work, there’s no intricate weaving of themes and words—barring Parlor Trick where she sings of “the deep and rosure kisses that spring only to existence in the instances your lips come into knowing mine.” But this, like most of the album, gives way to brutal minimalism:

oh
you beauty
i can’t
bear you
i have
wished to tend to you
i half
wanna tear you
no no no no no no no
i don’t mean
i want to hurt you
i just want to love you
all the way
all the way
oh


and yet, in those simple words she speaks more than any angst-ridden and eye-liner wearing band of the past decade: eschewing verbosity for simple cutting lyrics and never forgetting the power of her voice. This whole album is that moment on Skinny Love where Justin Vernon’s voice wavers a little and he shouts out his soul into the microphone. For a record where the majority of it is just her, her guitar, and feedback, it can be a tiring listen as she pulls your heartstrings into 50 different directions.

This is all coupled with some of the most discordant harmonies to ever approach beauty—like Oh Vanille, her magnus opus, Diane Cluck never lets you know whether she’s multitracking or simply using a group of her friends, layering voice upon voice upon voice until some tracks approach nothing but a series of infinite echos: one voice singing, but a thousand ones in reply. If Nick Drake’s soft, calming yet disturbed voice was the mirror for the early 70’s, then this is the the one for the early 00’s and its obsession with the media fire of our lives: self-destructive, introspective, minimalistic and desperate.

11 Pipers Piping/12 Days of Christmas

Review by David

Tracklist

1. Snake
2. Beatless Wonder
3. Real Good Time
4. Countless Times
5. Countless Times
6. Lucifer
7. Ribbon-Cutting Ceremony
8. Diamonds
9. Gardenovena
10. Leave Me Alone
11. My Virtue’s Gone (Hooray Hooray)
12. Reverly
13. Dilapidalliance
14. Reveller
15. (Untitled)
16. Modern Day
17. Parlor Trick
18. (Untitled)
19. Pray Headaches Away
20. Honed. Hemmed In.
21. Nothing But God
22. (Untitled)
23. If You See Sunlight

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