CHAIRLIFT: SOMETHING (2012)
1) Sidewalk Safari; 2) Wrong
Opinion; 3) I Belong In Your Arms; 4) Take It Out On Me; 5) Ghost Tonight; 6)
Cool As A Fire; 7) Amanaemonesia; 8) Met Before; 9) Frigid Spring; 10) Turning;
11) Guilty As Charged.
By the time their second album was released,
Chairlift had already reduced themselves to a duo: Aaron Pfenning left in 2010,
and now Chairlift consists of precisely what you see on the album cover. Upon
first impression, you do not get the feel that this affects the overall
accomplished feel of the music — Polachek and Wimberly are perfectly capable to
lay on all the layers on their own. However, technically that does transform
them into a «pure» synth-pop outfit, as the guitars are reduced to a bare
minimum and, for the most part, the atmosphere of the songs now depends on how
dark Wimberly makes his basslines and how cluttery Polachek makes her
keyboards.
The formal changes in musical textures are,
however, not the main reason why I think Something
is a step down, not up, from the
exciting debut of Does You Inspire You.
The main reason is that the album seems to lay down severe restrictions on the
eclecticism and ambitions with which they'd started out four years earlier — I
am not sure whether this means just how crucial the presence of Pfenning was
to their collective ego, or if it is just another case of the same unfortunate
tendency to self-pigeonhole that plagues so many artists, but the fact is, Something is just a synth-pop record of the «me and you» variety, with all the
songs whirling around the issue of finding a perfect relationship and then
trying not to ruin it. Sound familiar?..
In other words, forget about the ambitious mix
of personal and collective problems tackled in 2008, and get ready for a much
more modest mix of dance grooves and ballads that run the oh so wide gamut from
"I belong in your arms" to "Oh god, just let my love
survive". Despite some glowing reviews that actually acknowledged this self-yoking
as progress (like, the more they stay out of complex Marxist and Freudian
territory, the better for these silly idealistic kids), I find it disappointing
— like I said, Does You Inspire You
gave a cool impression of the world being discovered by a bunch of
inexperienced, but aspiringly smart kids, whereas Something is just another boring record that tries to find hidden
depths at the bottom of a glass of water.
Not that it is devoid of nice musical ideas and
hooks: if anything, it is saved by technical accomplishments rather than
mesmerizing personality. ʽSidewalk Safariʼ, opening the album, is pretty limp
if you follow the lyrics and try to convince yourself that Caroline Polachek as
a hot female stalker is a credible artistic image... but if you just think of
it as a synth-poppified adaptation of some romantic European dance pop groove
from around 1968, and pay more attention to the stylish overlays of
synthesizers and synth-treated guitars, it becomes nice. Likewise, I care not
for the verbal message of ʽWrong Opinionʼ, but I kinda like how the electronic
«broken glass effect» holds a dialog of its own with the heavy distorted guitar
chords — a good musical allegory of personal paranoia wrestling with the Hand
of Doom, if you wish.
However, as a singer, Polacheck only impresses
me about twice or thrice on this record. ʽGhost Tonightʼ is a really good one,
where you can sense faint echoes of the same dismal doomed desperation that
used to power all those Beth Gibbons classics — and it's only with the little
things, like the tension and implied tears in the "whoah-oh-oh"s that
follow the "Hollow heavy eyes, follow in your light, I'm a ghost
tonight" chorus, that the record is able to transcend from catchy pop to
the realm of the genuinely soulful. ʽFrigid Springʼ is another one, a
moonlight-on-the-lake dream pop tune, all chimes and echoes, and as they get to
the chorus, the lady transforms herself into an aethereal will-o'-wisp and just
floats across from speaker to speaker — luvverly. On the other hand, sometimes
they overdo this: on ʽTurningʼ, there's too much psychedelic vocalizing and not
enough singer presence. This is not Enya, after all.
The first single was the
tongue-twistedly-titled ʽAmanaemonesiaʼ, and it is far more typical of this
record than ʽBruisesʼ was of the debut: a catchy, but not terribly profound
synth-pop groove that tries to convey a sense of bewildered infatuation (or
something) with its fast tempo, jerkiness, and chaotic sample attack — sort of
like a cross between Depeche Mode and Kate Bush, not as dark as the former and
not as artsy as the latter (although the accompanying video, most of it spent
on featuring Polachek dancing on top of a giant red tongue, is every bit as
artsy as any given Kate Bush video — and as far as my own tastes go, Polachek
is almost every bit as terrible a dancer as Kate Bush is). And maybe it's an
exciting synthesis, but it also traps the record in a nostalgic vibe from
which, I believe, Does You Inspire You
was largely free: it sounded highly influenced by a lot of people, but also
modern and looking forward, whereas Something
is more like a tribute to the past, hardly eligible for the status of a «minor
modern classic». That said, I do know for a fact that quite a few people have
rated it higher than Does You Inspire
You — perhaps they are seeing something here that I am not seeing, or,
perhaps, they are not seeing
something in DYIY that I am seeing.
Naturally, I'd prefer to vote for the second
option, but Something is still well
deserving of a thumbs
up — on the whole, it is a creative, tasteful, genuinely musical
piece of work that just barely misses transcending its own genre limitations,
and, like almost everything else done in the sphere of art-pop today, cannot
help get sucked back into the same old 20th century.
No comments:
Post a Comment