CARIBOU: ANDORRA (2007)
1) Melody Day; 2) Sandy; 3)
After Hours; 4) She's The One; 5) Desiree; 6) Eli; 7) Sundialing; 8) Irene; 9)
Niobe.
I suppose that some time in the distant future,
when man's memory will be sufficiently enhanced to enlarge the artistic
pantheon to astronomic sizes, this
album will go down as Snaith's masterpiece. On the other hand, if at the same
time man's capacity for emotional abstractionism also happens to be increased,
so that the halls of MoMA and Beaubourg begin to resonate with sincerely shed
tears of joy and wonder, Andorra's
status might be challenged — because in 2007, it was the most «retro-sounding»
and «sonically conservative» album that the man had produced to date. It was
probably bound to happen, eventually, as artistic growth and evolution stimulated
Caribou to embrace them good old values of late Sixties' / early Seventies'
art-pop and symph-prog — without forgetting to integrate them with modern
electronic technologies and production values, of course, but make no mistake
about it: at the core of Andorra you
find melodic content with a collective stamp of approval from Brian Wilson,
Arthur Lee, Rod Argent, and even Jon Anderson (I hope they don't mind me
speaking for them in this case).
The man pulls no punches whatsoever with this
shift of style: without any atmospheric build-ups or warm-ups, ʽMelody Dayʼ
opens the album crash-boom-bang style, with a driving rhythm, a
bass-guitar-keyboard baroque-pop melody, and dreamy melodic vocals whose only
purpose seems to be to recreate the tender idealism of 1967-68 right here and
now. It's bouncy, it's tasteful (watch out for them flutes and
quasi-Mellotrons!), it's melancholic, it's well performed and produced, it's
catchy — yes, it's a ghola of a song instead of the real thing, but you
wouldn't even know that if you took it out of its context. In any case, it
reflects perfect craftsmanship that Dan's previous output only hinted at, and
it would be very impolite to state or even suspect that his heart was not
properly in it.
The amazing thing is how he manages to crush
the wall of biased scepticism — just as you think, «okay, he made this one good
song and put it in the beginning to stun us, the rest will probably be boring
soulless facsimiles, haven't we seen enough of these retro-freaks who honestly
love old time music but lack the talent to properly recreate it?», he strolls
on with ʽSandyʼ, a slower, but equally pretty upbeat love ballad that does not
simply mimick the atmosphere of some Zombies masterpiece, but cares about
intricacies and subtleties of vocal modulation: just listen to the way lines
like "you can't believe me... like all of the others who leave me..."
aim for your attention with a delirious falsetto flourish delivered in one
heavenly swoop. Damn, that's seductive!
There's no way that the "and you and I
will follow down the street" opening line of ʽAfter Hoursʼ is not a subtle
reference to "and you and I climb over the sea to the valley",
either, even if the song itself is too drone-based to properly sound like
classic Yes — but no matter, the overall psychedelic-idealistic vision of some
perfect world beyond regular human experience remains the same. If there's one
thing that genuinely separates this music from its faraway ancestors, it is
that little bit of shoegazing quasi-ambience that Snaith adds to many of the
songs — like the chorus to ʽShe's The Oneʼ, jolting on one chord and one
repetitive vocal phrase, something that both the Zombies and Yes would have
probably found too tedious — but then again, if you are amalgamating the Zombies and Yes in one package, you might as
well throw in some Cocteau Twins and some Slowdive, why not?
If there's a possible problem to be found, one
could look for it in the general similarity of the tone and the arrangement
details on most of the tracks — not that the same problem cannot be conjured
for Pet Sounds or anything — but
even that is somehow taken care of in the last track: the 8-minute «epic»
ʽNiobeʼ is based on a soft techno groove, with Snaith's electronic arsenal
finally unleashed on us in all its might, and just about every synth tone at
his disposal partaking in the melee. It's not the best track on the album, but
it is the most experimental, and although I fail to see what exactly this bunch
of stylistically diverse synthesized sonic comets whooshing past the main body
of the groove has to do with Niobe (do they represent her 14 dead children, or
Apollo's and Artemis' arrows, or what?), I cannot deny the buzzing psychedelic
effect, especially when you play this real loud in headphones. And even then,
the vocals ("I fall so far, I fall so far...") are still old school
art-pop to some extent.
Actually, it is not the instrumental
monotonousness that worries me but the emotional
monotonousness — all of the tracks being dominated by the same flavor of
«optimistic sadness», like a never ending goodbye with faint hopes of saying
hello once more in the distant future. To Dan's honor, he is able to escape the
common trap of optimistically sad indie-pop sung by bearded men in furry hats —
simply by being a better composer and arranger than most. But you do have to
accept that he will be communicating pretty much the same mood, differing by
the subtlest of subtle nuances, over and over and over; the fact that, for me
at least, upon the third listen this ceased to be boring only goes to show how
much real talent he has. I do hope the record was a big hit in Andorra, because
there's hardly any reason to be called that unless the man wanted to conquer an
additional 85,000 head strong market — but even though I'm no citizen of
Andorra myself, I am glad to throw in my thumbs up as well, for extra international
endorsement.
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