Kamis, 23 Maret 2017

Pitchfork's Best New Album -- Mount Eerie: A Crow Looked At Me

Mount Eerie: A Crow Looked At Me

No subject has been more badly exploited by art than death. How often have you found yourself in the middle of a good book or movie, warming up to its world, making the magical passage through which its characters' lives become temporarily real only to be sped into artificial reverence by someone dying? Gosh, you think: Death: That's big. This must be a pretty meaningful experience. Death is reduced to a sympathy-extraction device, what the New York Times critic Michiko Kakutani once described as "literary ambulance-chasing," designed to crowbar into the hearts of an audience just as they were thinking about changing the channel. Real death, meanwhile, moves ominously through the world of the living like a tide, gathering in waves that break without warning or reason, paroxysms of grief followed by yet more shapeless life. Fake death pops. Real death remains a slog.

Onto this tightrope walks Phil Elverum, a hermetically introspective songwriter who records under the name Mount Eerie. In spring of 2015, Elverum's wife Geneviève was diagnosed with pancreatic cancer, a disease that kills 80% of patients within a year. According to the American Cancer Society, nearly all people with pancreatic cancer are over 45; two-thirds are over 65. Geneviève died three months after her 35th birthday. A year and a half earlier, she had given birth to her and Elverum's first child, a girl.

A Crow Looked at Me, Elverum's ninth album as Mount Eerie—and 13th overall, counting his earlier music as the Microphones—mentions Geneviève in nearly every song, sometimes by name, sometimes through cold, negative space. It's almost as though Elverum has nothing better to talk about. Which, of course, he probably doesn't.

Elverum's recent albums—2015's Sauna, 2012's double feature of Clear Moon and Ocean Roar—were heavy on ambiance and fuzz, sonic embodiments of things through which we can't see. Crow is spare and clean, mostly voice and some guitar, the sound of coffee in winter. You can almost hear the floorboards creaking. In a recent interview, Elverum called it "barely music." Given the floss-thin line between his art and experience, you could take it as the album's intended genre: Barely music.

Over the past few years, there have been a handful of albums similar to Crow, or at least with a similarly autobiographical premise: Sun Kil Moon's Benji, Sufjan Stevens' Carrie & Lowell, Nick Cave's Skeleton Tree, stark, diaristic albums haunted by literal death, grief on record. Indie culture tends to prize this kind of undecorated directness as a stand-in for truth, as though nobody has ever spoken clearly and lied.

But listening to Crow, the songwriter I kept thinking of was Chan Marshall, whose early music as Cat Power felt confessional but surreal, painfully direct but impossible to pin down. Like Marshall, Elverum's sleight of hand is that standing naked doesn't make him any easier to see. If anything, Crow's cold spaces and plainspoken delivery lull the listener into an illusion of solid ground even when it's not there, laying everything on the same emotional bandwidth, from meditations on geese and forest fires to descriptions of his wife's jaundiced skin. He never tells you how to feel, or more surprisingly, when.

Elverum's early albums as the Microphones captured the solipsism of one's 20s, where even small feelings are uncontainable, not the internal flicker of neurons but plate tectonics, the saga of raging rivers and moons and stars. Here, one's inner world was always swallowing the outer one, not just a life among many but an allegory of heaven and earth. That the music was so obsessively layered, so obviously the product of a single mind only cemented the underlying metaphor: Elverum wasn't just the center of his universe, he was its creator.

Real life—its unpunctuated hum, its customer-service lines—has a way of knocking that out of you. Over the past several years, Elverum's point of view has become earthbound to the point of mundanity. Sauna, from 2015, featured an entire song about walking to the bookstore and seeing a pumpkin. Refreshingly, the pumpkin was not presented as a metaphor for anything; it was a pumpkin. Or, if it was a metaphor, it was only for the accumulation of stuff with no particular meaning or attachment to narrative, for that rare, seamless mindset where things are what they are. Crow's sharpest line is in its third act: "Conceptual emptiness was cool to talk about, back before I knew my way around these hospitals."

Most of the time, though, Elverum's ground isn't so solid. Crow isn't so much about sickness or death but the hallucinatory stupor of grief, a state where everything—toothbrushes, flies, crows, and sunsets—flickers with suggestion and memory, as though Geneviève's spirit had been scattered back into the universe like seeds. One understands Elverum's temptation intuitively: After all, he can still hold her toothbrush.

So simple, so tactile, so deceptively real are these songs. Their cumulative effect is that they become wobbly with metaphor, forcing the listener into the kind of magical thinking that transforms everything in the living world into a sign of the dead, only to snap back into a reality that for better and worse means nothing. Halfway through the album, Elverum's daughter asks if mama swims, to which Elverum replies that yes, she swims all the time now, because they scattered her ashes over water.

The album's most breathtaking line is its last. "Sweet kid, I heard you murmur in your sleep. 'Crow,' you said. 'Crow.' And I asked, 'Are you dreaming about a crow?' And there she was." In a single moment, the mechanics of these songs—the way dreams refract life, the way grief resurrects the dead without logic or warning—becomes blindingly clear. Then, either because Elverum is polite, or because he's tired, or because there is nothing more to say, he ends with the image of his wife lingering like something glimpsed through a rainy window, blurry, then gone.

It would be easy to hear this album as sad. Certainly the facts of Elverum's story are. But facts aren't art and art isn't real, at least not the way cancer is. For an album so firmly anchored by death, Crow is suffused with life: The geese, the forest fires, the crows, the grocery-store lines where Elverum stumbles through awkward conversation with people from town. Tragedy hasn't stopped him from noticing the world; if anything, it seems to have pried his eyes open for good. As for the question of sadness, I defer to a quote attributed to Anton Chekhov that art should "prepare us for tenderness." I have two very young children of my own; one of them is sleeping on my chest while I write. Listening to Crow, I find myself imagining what life would be like if I had to raise them without their mother. Think along these lines for any longer than a few seconds and you, like I, may find yourself rebounding from sorrow to a state of almost infinite gratitude. Take a good look, Elverum says: Most of this is beautiful and none of it is guaranteed.





March 24, 2017 at 12:00PM
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Kamis, 09 Maret 2017

Pitchfork's Best New Album -- Jay Som: Everybody Works

Jay Som: Everybody Works

Virtuous though it may be, patience is a difficult quality to capture in guitar rock, a medium that much prefers boldness, concision, and urgency. Perhaps that's why Bay Area multi-instrumentalist Melina Duterte's reverence for the human capacity to wait and think and grow comes across as a revelation on Everybody Works, her first official album as Jay Som. "Take time to figure it out," she advises on lead single "The Bus Song." In its context, she's caught between relationship statuses, assuring the object of her fixation that she'll "be the one who sticks around." As an introduction to an album full of reminders not to rush things, though, the line is a relief, enough to make you involuntarily exhale.

Bedroom pop is a genre designation that loses meaning by the year—not just as technology creeps closer to erasing any distinction between studio production and home recording, but also as the musicians associated with it develop tastes more varied and less retro than, say, Ariel Pink's. Twenty-two-year-old Duterte made the fuzzy, dreamy, plaintive aesthetic her own on Turn Into, nine self-recorded tracks she uploaded to Bandcamp on a tipsy whim over a year ago and re-released with Polyvinyl in late 2016, billing the makeshift debut as a collection of "finished and unfinished songs" rather than a proper album. Although she made Everybody Works alone in her bedroom studio, its repertoire ranges from folk to funk to chart pop. It's not a bedroom-pop album because it sounds a certain way, but because it feels so intimate. Most of Duterte's elaborate songs could be mistaken for full-band compositions, yet her preference for writing and recording in solitude imbues each one with an introspective quality.

Liberated from the obligation to conform to any one sound, Duterte investigates new styles with purpose. She's smitten with Carly Rae Jepsen's E•MO•TION, and it shows in the hooky choruses of "The Bus Song" and "Remain," two tracks steeped in exuberant longing. With its smooth keyboards and slinky bass line, "Baybee" comes on like an R&B slow jam, but instead of steaming up the windows, it's about seducing yourself into seeing your beloved through a rough patch: "If I leave you alone/When you don't feel right/I know we'll sink for sure," Duterte coos on top of the music, like a layer of pure calm. "1 Billion Dogs" submerges anxious lyrics in a cloud of feedback that melds shoegaze, indie pop, and grunge as if it were a forgotten gem from the DGC Rarities compilation.

But the most arresting songs are the ones that defy categorization entirely. The first minute of the album, on "Lipstick Stains," sounds the way orchestra instruments might upon waking from an afternoon nap, blinking and stretching in the sunlight. When the vocals kick in more than halfway through the track, Duterte's murmur is just as drowsily blissful: "I like the way your lipstick stains/The corner of my smile," she breathes. Everybody Works closes with "For Light," an epic, seven-minute ballad that transforms a whispered promise—"I'll be right on time/Open blinds for light/Won't forget to climb"—into a sing-along prayer by adding in the voices of backup singers. The mood of weary resilience is reminiscent of Nick Cave's "Push the Sky Away," another album-closing message of encouragement that fully acknowledges the herculean effort it takes, sometimes, to merely keep going.

As that comparison suggests, Duterte has absorbed more of life's hard lessons than most of us do by age 22. The patience that suffuses Everybody Works doesn't reflect the naïveté of a kid who's sure she has unlimited time to chase her ambitions and find love; it comes out of an emotionally mature view of relationships and the 10 years of work she has already put into her songwriting, taking shitty jobs and enduring family strife to become the musician she is today. "I'll remain under your moon," she pledges on "Remain," an anthem of (perhaps one-sided) commitment. "Everybody Works" registers Duterte's resentment at how easily success seems to come to the "rock star" who make her wonder, "Did you pay your way through?" But empathy wins out in the end; she makes "everybody works" a mantra, repeating the phrase as though to remind herself of the way other people's painstaking efforts can be invisible to us.

"All of my songs are so different, but you know it's me," Duterte remarked in a recent Pitchfork profile. She's right, and there's no better indicator that a songwriter has found her voice than the ability to explore new styles and still sound like the same artist. Just a few years into her adult life, and only one album into her recording career, Melina Duterte has swept past a milestone many musicians never even get in their sights.





March 10, 2017 at 01:00PM
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Selasa, 07 Maret 2017

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Rabu, 01 Maret 2017

Pitchfork's Best New Album -- Vagabon: Infinite Worlds

Vagabon: Infinite Worlds

Just about twenty minutes into Lætitia Tamko's compact debut as Vagabon, Infinite Worldsshe sings a line so cutting that, upon first hearing it, I had to remove my headphones and take stock of my surroundings. "What about them scares you so much?/My standing there threatens your standing, too," Tamko sings on "Cleaning House," broadcasting a simple but eminently resonant message that defines why these eight songs feel so important, especially now. It should be no secret that Tamko's thought runs through the minds of all those made marginal by prejudicial thinking—and actual executive action. It could be your skin color, the way you dress, who you worship or love, but nonetheless that question flashes through the minds of those made to feel less. A simple, evocative guitar plucking in the background guides this sentiment with precision into the ear of listener, and down into their gut.

Yet, Tamko's inimitable take on DIY indie rock is never downtrodden. It's victorious—even when her feats feel pyrrhic. Her soaring, winsome, and mutable tenor is unlike any of her peers in the New York scene. She also shreds. More importantly, Tamko's first proper album is a stunning document of what indie rock can look like from a viewpoint that isn't necessarily widespread in the genre. Infinite Worlds is an album interested in grappling with seemingly intractable and very personal questions about sharing space, finding a home, and fostering community in a world that can be caustic to those very actions.

Some of the songs that appear on Infinite Worlds started as rougher drafts on 2014 EP Persian Garden. Listening to the earlier work, it's clear how much Tamko has grown. She moved to New York as a teenager from Cameroon, and until she graduated from college in 2015, music was more or less a hobby. Her Bandcamp demos eventually led her to the Bushwick community art space Silent Barn, and a venerable DIY scene that includes artists like Frankie Cosmos and Crying (members of both bands contributed to Infinite Worlds).

"The Embers," the album's opener, was originally a song called "Sharks," and it has transitioned from whispered confession to empowering paean. The song's anthemic, steady guitars and booming drums recall the sound of Modest Mouse or Built to Spill, but her voice is the anchor to all these songs. It's a powerful tool that can move from soft to loud, confrontational to relaxing, with an uncanny grace.

Tamko shows this in songs like "Fear & Force" and "Mal à L'aise." On the former, she sings about a failed relationship, isolation, and the search for a sanctuary. "I've been hiding in the smallest space/I am dying to go/This is not my home," Tamko sings, alternating between breathy harmonies and straightforward delivery (Greta Kline, aka Frankie Cosmos, provides backing vocals). The latter is one of the most interesting songs on the album: a piece of gauzy, ambient pop, not unlike the Cocteau Twins. Sung completely in French, "Mal à L'aise" is a sound collage made of a spectral chorus of voices, processed and multiplied (including sampled vocals from Julie Byrne/Makonnen collaborator Eric Littman). These sounds shuffle around in an indistinct musical space, which is both haunted and relaxed. It's almost close to new age, conjuring up the work of Harold Budd or Grouper, but Tamko gives the airy vibe of this song weight with lyrics that touch on accepting social discomfort and embracing oneself.

Throughout Infinite Worlds, Tamko interrogates what it means to occupy space with others who don't necessarily see eye to eye, be it parents, peers, or strangers. Sometimes imagining that ideal world leads to bouts of doubt, or even magical realism (see "100 Days"). But Tamko keeps coming back to the same point: the community you want to live in is one you have to make. Guided by a more mature sound, Infinite Worlds is the rock music we need nowadays, when it seems like home, wherever it might be, is getting farther away.





March 02, 2017 at 01:00PM
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