Showing posts with label Album. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Album. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 15, 2012

Breakdown*...Girls- 'Album' [2009] || 'Father, Son, Holy Ghost' [2011]

I've decided to change the name of this new category from "Review" to Breakdown

Album [2011]
Growing up in the Children of God cult, Girls singer Christopher Owens said he never had anything that could be called a childhood.  He hardly knew his father, his older sister fled the cult never to return and he watched his brother die due to the cult's lack of medical practice or use of technology offered through their atypical lifestyle.  "Imagine being raised in the Taliban," he once said in an interview.  Through their debut album, cleverly titled Album, Owens opens up these past wounds and wrenching memories and spills out those feelings and troubled memories in song.  By this description, one could infer a more melancholic tone throughout the album. But this is hardly the case. What he sings about and what it sounds like come as polar opposites.  Yes, he offers a slower more melancholic song or two, but this seems to be standard practice on rock albums these days.

Owens opens up the album on “Lust for Life” with a simple request- longing for love and continues on  asking for things I never think twice about having like “pizza and a bottle of wine.”  Simple joys that most people take for granted.  But Owens is in no position to do so. As sad and sorry as these words come through, no such sadness emerges through the sound.  Fit with his erratically squeaky voice, “Lust for Life” is not complete until you add upbeat guitar riffs, snare taps, and maracas.  The culmination of these sounds work to overpower the seemingly despondent lyrics and creates a song nothing less than an upbeat, top-tapping delight.  The same trick is done on the next song “Laura” where you will find yourself grooving along with the bendy guitars riffs in approval as his pleas for love ring out in the background.

The songs on Album largely contain lyrics of considerable sadness, grief and loss; this comes as no surprise given Owens tumultuous back-story.  But he cleverly disguises them behind the more joyous and upbeat tempo of Beach Boys-esque guitars and other groovy, eccentric sounds.  A simple formula sure, but no two songs sound the same on Album.   You go from scratchy, washed out guitar chords on a two minute song called “Big Bag” right over to “Hellhole Ratface,” where the surfer-guitar mantra pulls back in favor of slow acoustic melodies.  The maracas are exchanged for sleigh bells and Owens’s craven voice takes center stage in a more tepid sounding melody.  But halfway into the seven minute song, Owens brings back the familiar, strengthening the sincere tone of this song with two more electric guitars, an organ and a choir of hands clapping the song through its end in a soothing crescendo.  Readers can relate to many of the song's lyrics.  On "Hellhole Ratface," Owens shows his longing to live life to the fullest as he sings "I don't want to die without shaking up a leg or two..."  You may not find yourself dancing to this song, but you won't skip it either.

He does this and then has a song like “God Dammed” which takes a similar simple approach carrying nothing more than an acoustic, a set of bongos and the perfect every once-in-a-while tap of a percussion rattle.  Almost the same on paper, but it sounds much different.  No two songs really sound the same at all.  Owens commonly likes to emit his past pains and sadness through the lyrics of Album, but it’s hardly a plea for sympathy as the words tend to be overpowered by the energetic tones of guitars, and stabilizing precussion sounds in every which possible way.  Even so, the slower sounding songs end up evoking more appreciation for their sounds than any sort of sadness or empathy.  With such a variance in style, Girls will keep you guessing on every track of Album, ensuring a great listen from start to finish.



Monday, April 2, 2012

Useless Clatter...New Category For '"Review"'

In my experience, when an artist of my liking comes out with a new album I always seek it out, regardless of what critics say.  Whether Pitchfork or Rolling Stone give it a 9 or a 3 doesn’t matter because in most cases, my previous attachment to the band gives me reason to accepting the new material regardless of public opinion. 
      That being said, I am introducing a new category on TUNEclatter titled “Review.”  It’s important that the word contain those quotations because as I previously stated, I don’t stand by reviews of music as much as I do for movies.  What I will begin to attempt with this new category is not to give the album a rating as much as I would like to comment on the new material in terms of its sound comparison with the artist’s previously released album. 
      On my other blog, FILMclatter, I have a category titled ‘Why See This’ in which I state the reasons why I believe a particular movie is worth seeing.  In other words, I would rather just promote the movies and music I love as opposed to giving a mark of criticism to everything I can.  There are plenty of people out there doing the same thing, so I see any effort of my own to be rather trivial. 
      Above all though, I have always found myself interested in looking at the particular change in style a band encompasses over the years and therefore feel that comparing albums in that matter is a much more noteworthy thing for me to write about as opposed to shelling out the 100th review of an album months after its release. 


+ The first albums that will be “reviewed” then will be from the San Francisco indie band, Girls. Their two albums being Father, Son, Holy Ghost from last September and their debut feature, Album, from 2010.