Exclusive: Animal Collective Preview

12/04/2009




 

Eagerly awaited EP due in stores on December 15. Meanwhile, the group is going to Sundance next January.

 

By Meryl Trussler

 

In its first many moments ‘Graze' tips tinny synth chord into tinny synth chord, back and forth like one of those executive toy see-saws full of strange immiscible liquids, and you get to worrying that maybe the new Animal Collective EP, Fall Be Kind (Domino), will be about as affecting/relevant to your fervent hipster lifestyle as said little see-saw - because maybe you've seen Animal Collective on the Merriweather Post Pavilion tour, and maybe in between tweet-worthy crescendos of awesomeness you've had to check your watch to see how long they've been faffing around with white noise, fading out of one song and not, perceptibly, into another - and maybe you're sort of unnerved at this seeming return from the pop beats to the unending, groggy experimentalism, experimentalism without the batshit crazy folk stuff that made the early albums so good - and maybe you're thinking that's what AC are now, they're all about the drone and delaying the pleasure and never playing goddamn ‘For Reverend Green', and that's seeped onto record for good and you have to give them up and they have to be one of those bands you get really heartrendingly mournful about, like a dead dog but then -

 

But then halfway through ‘Graze' and the lazy chant of  "let me begin..." it kicks in. Cymbals! Bass stripes! Pan flutes! "Why do you have to go? / WHY DO YOU HAVE TO GOOO-ooo?"  Back to that Strawberry Jam ecstasy that crawls over you like kittens. But, but -

 

But then they present this turd called ‘What Do I Want? Sky' which relentlessly slobbers out the title over this sunny California one-hit-wonder pop melody that sounds simultaneously like Len (remember ‘Still My Sunshine'?), the New Radicals (‘You've Got the Music in You'?) and Sugar Ray (‘Every Morning' there's a halo hanging something something?) except far less enjoyable. But and yet and bloody however -

 

But there's this gem called ‘On a Highway', that starts off slow with the same three-chord, Fuck Buttons-kinda pulsations they dig, that grows to a happy, hippy drumbeat and rising harmonies, and Avey talks about being, yeah, on a highway, jealous of Noah's dreaming. And ‘I Think I Can' comes in with another queer, quacking, thundercracking synth riff, and demonstrates their abilities to make any old mutant made of notes catchy as hell, and culminates in a jubilant "I think I can I think I can I think I..."

 

I think they can too. But on this EP they don't. They can't achieve whatever it is. Unity, perhaps. The constant inconstancy, the tugging about between good and bad and mediocre like a failing marriage, is taxing to listen to. That said, with albums as near-unanimously adored as the last three looming behind them, one patchy EP is naturally going to stick out so sorely and so ten-thumbed. Not one to have on a ten-lap repeat, but worth its half-hour's attention, and not in the least worth throwing in the towel over (you know, the tea towel embroidered with Noah Lennox's face - I saw it). It is nice to not be hit over the head with AC's talent every now and then.

 

And damn, those are some tasty pan flutes.

 

 

***

 

More Animal Collective News:

 

Fall Be Kind is released December 15 and was recorded by Ben Allen at Sweet Tea in Oxford, MS in February 2008 and at Mission Sound in Brooklyn, NY August 2009. From the band: "It includes recent live favorites Graze and What Would I Want? Sky (featuring the first ever licensed Grateful Dead sample). Fall Be Kind will be available worldwide on CD, 12" vinyl and via digital download."

 

Track Listing
1 - Graze
2 - What Would I Want? Sky
3 - Bleed
4 - On a Highway
5 - I Think I Can

 

Animal Collective kicks off a short tour next week; details and dates at their MySpace page: www.myspace.com/animalcollective.

 

Meanwhile, the upcoming Sundance Film Festival will be showcasing an Animal Collective film titled ODDSAC, directed by collaborator Danny Perez. Speaking to NME.com, bandmember Avey Tare commented, "We tried to make the music go along with the visuals as much as possible.  We didn't want it to sound just like a soundtrack, but then we didn't want it to be like a music video either. It's kinda like a psychedelic film, it's not like a narrative film or anything. There are more cohesive moments in it, but then there are some that are a little more abstract."

 

[Photo Credit: Adriano Fegundes]

 

 




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