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CD Review: Good Night, States: Country/Static

on Wed, 2012-03-28 03:57

 

Good Night, States’ second full-length album, Country/Static, starts off with studio talk about drum sizes and, possibly, an inside joke about burlap . In fact, it takes 20 seconds until the song kicks in. The transparency conveyed through the inclusion of studio sounds lets the listener in on the recording process and usually signifies the band’s enjoyment in the creation of the work. One hopes that GN,S enjoys the process since writing and recording can be arduous when membership is split among multiple cities. From the liner notes, this album was written throughout 2010, “one weekend at a time, in Pennsylvania and New Jersey.” Recording commenced in 2011 in New York, Pittsburgh, and New Jersey. 

So, how does a two-year process feel? The record bursts out of the gate with the strongest song, “Whithersoever”, a track that immediately recalls the experimentation present on Wilco’s Yankee Hotel Foxtrot. Modulating synthesizer sits atop a tom/shaker-based drum rhythm. Strummed acoustic and a polite piano melody enters. It is a nice clean mix. Instruments enter and drop. No sub-melody overshadows another. Cymbal overdubs help blend the crescendo into a B section that transitions into the main hook over new chords. Overall, the main vocal melody is charming, and the backup harmonies make the song.  At roughly 2+ minutes of actual song, this is a perfect structure.

“Ceilings” keeps the beat going: distorted bass, handclaps, intimate vocals. GN,S certainly have their own sound, but it is hard not to compare certain songs with certain artists, especially since chamber pop is currently the predominant form of indie rock. So, that said, a little Arcade Fire shows it’s head here with a great triumphant chorus. Structurally, this song fights tradition with a half-sized first chorus, and some synth drone passages. Again, Megan Lindsey’s backup vocals are terrific.

“In My New Language” plays the context game. Without organ, this is a GN,S song (with rather nice lyrics). With organ, this is a GN,S song with a Tom Petty chorus. Apparently a live favorite from the band’s recent onslaught of Pittsburgh house shows last month, “Fog In The Valley” contains some slow-jam worthy beats and a slightly southern chorus. More interestingly is the reversed piano and synthesizer coda that recalls a little of Laurie Spiegel’s early work at Bell Labs. The push this album gives to sonic experimentation is welcomed. There is definitely a little more room to inject that experimentation into the songwriting, too.

Looking back at the band’s first two efforts, Short Films on Self-Control and the In the Impossible Tension EP, Country/Static is a great advancement. Sonically, the album is well-produced, all sounds are present and have purpose. From a writing standpoint, each song can stand on its own. Some nice twists pop up like the seven-chord verses on “Inside” and a winding chorus that takes 12 bars to loop on “Float Out Every Man”. The synths are better integrated and feel like a better choice than guitar leads. However, at 55 minutes, the perfection can feel a little stiff on the later songs. 

“Tired of Making Sense” starts almost exactly like the previous rocker “Headed My Direction” with both songs enriching some rock chords with flair. Both solid songs, but the later feels redundant. 

Lyrically, the album is very strong. Check these out:

“Make some Cajun friends in the country’s mouth.” (In My New Language)
“We don’t explain events or practice any palliative recall…When all life‘s reconnaissance is in finding where the boundaries should fall.” (Everybody Is Sound)

But sometimes the delivery feels like it never progresses above that cracked softness. The immediacy is there, but little touches like the falsetto on “Fog In the Valley” help break things up and give the words more weight. 

Country/Static is a suitable name for this collection of songs. Good Night, States does a nice job of humanizing the synthesizer and taming a few noise elements to underpin clean folk and rock songs. The band gels well. Dan Harding’s drumming is inventive and respectful of the songs. With Trevor Baker’s basslines, the band is in the pocket. Steve Gretz is a strong songwriter, and the sonic detail and background harmonies from Lindsey and Baker add considerable weight to the album. The album’s risks feel a little calculated, but that is hardly a complaint. This is a record of great care and love. 

Good Night, States releases their album on 04.05.12 with a big event at New Hazlett Theater. VIP Tickets are available for a 6:30 gathering and regular admission lets you in at 7:30. Check out tickets here: http://www.showclix.com/event/GoodNightStatesAlbumRelease

Album Review: Darts and Arrows - Eyes of the Carnival

on Tue, 2012-01-31 04:59

Darts and Arrows - Eyes of the Carnival

Generally, when I think of music coming from Chicago these days, I never fail to pick up the latest Vandermark and Fred Lonberg-Holm releases, and I definitely try to keep up on the slightly younger crew that may include Keefe Jackson, Jason Stein, Josh Berman, Frank Rosaly, Mike Reed, Dave Rempis and others. Darts and Arrows stands out against this crowd for what they are not. Their second album, Eyes of the Carnival, is definitely not free improvisation, not an abstraction of late 60s modal jazz, not a marriage of chamber composition and jazz. Folk and rock forms and melodies act as centerpieces for the group. On top of those structures, a jazz combo is placed.

Opener “Ivy” comes in midstream, running through a mix of late 60s psych and fusion. The piece, penned by guitarist and band leader Bill MacKay, is short and sweet, split into two main melodic statements that only provide glimpses of improvised transitions. It is a nice warm-up for the tunes that follow.

“Outcry” follows with a slippery melody that runs into a crunchy rock section. A restatement of the two sections happens before guitar and keys overlap in a succession of rhythmic, modal solos that veer on and away from the beat. The warm fuzz of the guitar and keys mixed with a jazz combo lineup masks the folk roots that are at work in the compositions. Hints of Pentangle creep in, maybe Richard Thompson. On the jazz side, the guitar playing of John Abercrombie seems an appropriate reference.

Keyboardist Ben Boye, who has worked with Bonnie “Prince” Billy among others, contributes the ballad “Frequent Vacation”. A succulent solo by MacKay is followed by Boye’s solo, which may at times be too choppy for it’s own good. Melody seeps back in and the song fades to a close. Very nice piece.

Elsewhere, “Slipping Through My Fingers” has a Latin tinge, recalling an outline of early Return To Forever. The arrangement does a nice job of building to the main melodic figure. Closer “Film Music No. 2” follows a gentle folk chord progression, inserting a pleasant bass solo from Kyle Hernandez. MacKay also gets in a nice solo, excelling when rock and folk turns are more appropriate.

The quartet’s biggest asset is the sense of melody and the adaptation of folk elements into the jazz setting. The album invites humming along after a few listens. The playing never veers toward a virtuosic approach, nor is the soloing especially inspired, but the pieces hit more emotional strings than some of their contemporaries. Whether that is from the familiarity inherent in the folk music roots or the emotionally manipulating qualities of tried and true majestic chord structures seems to matter not. The intimacy provided by the warm recording and group playing is enough to make this a welcoming listen.

Check out album opener "Ivy" here: http://soundcloud.com/billdmackay/ivy-2/s-mLsxt

Notes:

This album will be released sometime this Spring (2012), so be sure to keep an ear out.

Check out more Darts and Arrows and Bill MacKay on the web:
http://dartsarrows.blogspot.com/
http://billmackay.bandcamp.com/