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CD Reviews
Asobi Seksu | Hush
Polyvinyl (2009)
By
MICHAEL BRODEUR
|
February 18, 2009
HUSH
" alt="photo of 'HUSH'">
3.0
Stars
Faced with a blank canvas after 2006's near-perfect
Citrus
, NYC four-piece Asobi Seksu could easily have repeated themselves with another heavy polishing of shoegaze ideals. And faced with the prospect of a new label known for its raft of barely post-emo devotees, they also could have bailed on their nascent legacy and let fall a platter of drab pop-by-numbers. But
Hush
quells qualms with the relaxed assurance every third album should carry. Rather than replumb the depths of their '90s alt-guitar fetishes, the group opt to broaden their palette with glocks, organs, theremins, glowing string synths, and, of course, Yuki Chikudate's icy soprano — here cutting her melodic curlicues more boldly than ever before. "Glacially" moves from twinkling atmospherics into a coda of halting, herky-jerky guitar antics that will have any Swirlies fan cueing up
Blonder Tongue Audio Baton
for dessert. And with their unexpected negative space (read: breathing room), both "In the Sky" and "Gliss" signal that Asobi Seksu might be tipping more in the direction of the artfully wrought post-pop of Blonde Redhead than the hazy, gazy soundscapes of A Sunny Day in Glasgow — and you could certainly pick worse poles to wobble between.
Related
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,
A Place To Bury Strangers | Exploding Head
,
Freudian trip
,
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Asobi Seksu
In the two years since their debut, NYC’s Asobi Seksu have found solid footing for their dreamy, effervescent mixture of coy indie rock and shoegazer noisemaking. Asobi Seksu, "New Years" (mp3 via MySpace)
A Place To Bury Strangers | Exploding Head
When it comes to the resurgence of all things shoegaze, only one question remains: how literal do you want it?
Freudian trip
Hip-hop is faker than Vince McMahon's business plan and tan combined. Pussy-whipped MCs who sling Whoppers rhyme about bagging blow and smacking ho's; even cats who actually do poison their communities exaggerate their hood credentials.
Photos: Ra Ra Riot at Paradise Rock Club
Ra Ra Riot on tour to promote their new album, The Rhumb Line
The Big Hurt: Think of England
Although we like to think of ourselves as having an ironclad hegemony over the pop of the Western world, those plucky Brits like to rise from their misty bog and tweak our nipples with a pond-crossing chart smash once in a while.
Review: A Serious Man
The Coen Brothers have put the sad back in sadism.
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If knowledge is power, and words are the vessels for ideas, then the appeal of Scribblenauts is easy to understand.
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Those who worry that the eco-movement seems incapable of getting beyond its white upper-middle-class base will be disturbed anew by Robert Stone’s Earth Days , where every talking head is a well-bred Caucasian.
Kabob and Curry
You know you've come to the right neighborhood when you can smell Indian spices in the air instead of over-used French fry oil!
The Big Hurt: A healthy death
A member of the recently reunited BACKSTREET BOYS — the really Christian one who looks like the Beast from that 1980s Beauty and the Beast TV show — has swine flu. That doesn't even come close to being sufficient punishment for his many aesthetic atrocities (which include his face), but it'll do for the moment.
Review: Where the Wild Things Are
I can’t speak for the kids, but I would rate Spike Jonze & Dave Eggers’s adaptation of Maurice Sendak’s 40-page children’s picture book up there with Up and Wall•E as topping the recent renaissance in children’s movies. If pressed, I’d rank it close to The Wizard of Oz .
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Topics
:
CD Reviews
,
Asobi Seksu
,
Blonde Redhead
,
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