ARCHITECTURE IN HELSINKI: FINGERS CROSSED (2003)
1) One Heavy February; 2)
Souvenirs; 3) Imaginary Ordinary; 4) Scissor Paper Rock; 5) To And Fro; 6)
Spring 2008; 7) The Owls Go; 8) Fumble; 9) Kindling; 10) It's Almost A Trap;
11) Like A Call; 12) Where You've Been Hiding; 13) City Calm Down; 14)
Vanishing.
Can an Australian band that calls itself
«Architecture In Helsinki» be any good? It probably can, but it better be real good, then, since it takes an awful
lot of goodness to redeem the original sin of calling oneself «Architecture In
Helsinki» when not only do you not live
in Helsinki, but you live so far away from Helsinki, you might as well call
yourself «Architecture In Eldorado» and get away with it on a much firmer
basis. In other words, these guys are so ferociously «indie-indie» even before
you hear them play a single note, they have to work double hard to earn our
pardon, and triple hard to earn our admiration.
The good news is that they try, and the bad
news is that they do not try hard enough — in fact, their major purpose seems,
above all, to demonstrate their sworn allegiance to generic indie aesthetics.
There are five primary and three secondary members in the band, playing
everything from guitars to electronics to woodwinds and brass to melodica to
xylophone — and, of course, there is not a single professional, let alone
virtuoso, musician anywhere in sight. Vocals are democratically divided
between boys and girls — and, of course, there is not a single unique vocal
tone or style anywhere in sight, although everything sounds pleasant. The songs
are short (we don't want to seem too pretentious), the lyrics are
psychedelically introspective (we do
want to seem magical and mysterious), and the arrangements are multi-layered
(the more instruments we play at the same time, the less people will notice
that we cannot play any of them).
Did this sound like I just described Arcade
Fire? Well, not quite — Arcade Fire are not afraid of letting their songs run
for more than three minutes, they do
have relatively unique and easily recognizable vocal styles, and their lyrics
actually make sense and show plenty of aching relevance. Most importantly,
Arcade Fire are quite heavily grounded in reality, and these guys are twee-oriented,
riding on rose-colored clouds until the pants are soaking wet. (To make matters
worse, none of this cloud-riding has anything to do with architecture in
Helsinki — much of which is conceptually following Saint-Petersburg, and could,
with some reservations, be called «light», but not light enough to associate
itself with this kind of music).
Nevertheless, Fingers Crossed does manage to give us an interesting, not entirely
predictable kind of sound. The overall vibe is that of «little-angelish»
innocence, due to all the xylophones, glockenspiels, high-pitched electronics,
quasi-surf guitars, and pseudo-pre-pubescent vocals. This is not news in
itself, but it is made into news by an unusually equal-rights approach to all
the separate elements of the band's sound: retro-pop guitar, futuristic
electronics, marching band brass combos, street-player style wind-up
instruments, and folk-pop singing. With this particular brand of synthesis,
Architecture In Helsinki have no problem carving themselves out their own
identity — even if nobody needs it, you can't at least deny it's there
somewhere.
Alas, in the end it all fails for one simple —
and way too common — reason: not a single member of the eight-piece band
happens to be an accomplished, or even simply talented songwriter. This is not
avantagarde music: they do know how to put together strings of notes so that
they end up with traditional rhythmics, harmony and melody. Throw in the
rose-cloudy style of arrangement, and it's all nice and pretty and you sort of
begin to feel bad about criticizing this kind of music — as if you were taking
candy from a baby or something. But really and honestly, there is hardly a
single song on here that has anything
memorable about it. It's all atmosphere, from top to bottom, and on a record
that presumably consists of two-and-a-half-minute long pop songs, «pure atmosphere»
is like a humiliating rape of your expectations.
The only time where the band did strike a
sensitive nerve was on ʽThe Owls Goʼ, whose repetitive, childish chorus, sung
in feather-light mode by Kellie Sutherland (the band's resident clarinet and
God-knows-what-else player), accidentally embottles an ounce of genuine protective
tenderness (it also constitutes a terrific case of misheard lyrics for me —
until I looked it up, the line "finding a replacement with a heart
sedated" kept coming across as "finding a replacement for the House
of David", which, I guarantee it, would give the whole song an entirely
different, and far more profound, meaning). In contrast, the verses, sung by
one of the band's lead vocalists (probably Cameron Bird, the guitar player),
are completely blank and colorless.
Every now and then, something will faintly
register on the radar, like a much weaker, fluffier variant of Broadcast
(ʽScissor Paper Rockʼ, where it is clearly seen how Sutherland can come across
as a shallower copy of Trish Keenan), or a watered-down imitation, perhaps a
subconscious one, of the kaleidoscopic electronics of Animal Collective
(ʽImaginary Ordinaryʼ), or a Beirut-like use of the brass section to generate a
meekly East European flair (ʽTo And Froʼ). Nothing in these attempts is
offensive or even «pathetic», because it is all so innocent and generally
unpretentious: when, at the very beginning of the album, the chorus asks us,
"Have we missed an opportunity?" (ʽSouvenirsʼ), you probably wouldn't
even want to upset the kids with a straightforwardly negative answer. But —
shh, don't tell anybody in the band, but this is exactly what it is about: a
missed opportunity.
I know how it could have all worked: had the
band refrained from trying to write original songs and, instead, devoted itself
to covering superior material, recasting
it in this pretty, cloud-a-licious, modestly innovative mold, Fingers Crossed might have passed for a
charming and maybe even thought-stimulating curio. As it is, the album earned
mixed reviews from the very beginning, and although the band did manage to
achieve minor cult status among certain circles of twee-pop lovers, it seems
quite just that they never made it to the big leagues.
Check "Fingers Crossed" (CD) on Amazon
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