Pontiak - Living

  • Pontiak - Living

    Pontiak - LivingA record that almost makes sadness sound desirable.

    First things first, this – the Virginia-based Carney brothers’ fifth in four years – is an excellent and unique record. You can chuck random reference points at the sound they’re creating – the unnerving squall of Slint, the introverted mumble of Midlake, a stripped-down take on Crazy Horse at their most fuzz-obsessed, a handful of Mudhoney records played at the slower, wrong-er speed – but really, this record sounds less like any of those bands, and more like someone sat in a puddle in a field crying in the rain. It’s a record that almost makes sadness sound desirable.

     

    It’s also a record that lends itself to writing wordy bullshit about it; these are songs squalid and long, full of tetchy atmospherics and corn-fed longing sentiment. Take the acoustic sulk of Beach, a funeral march of sorts, segueing into the hard (country) rock of Lemon Lady, sounding much akin to the Melvins raised on the farm (as trio Van, Lain and Jennings Carney all were) by ma and pa. Then there’s the grammatically nonsensical Forms of The, which owes something to a lo-fi, cassette-recorded spin on The Byrds, or anyone who’s ever sparked up a joint on the west coast of America really, a reference point you’d imagine the boys’ scowling unshaved faces would spit out a blob of tobacco in disgust at. Or not. There you go, that’s the sort of rural imagery you can’t really disassociate the sounds from.

    Lees de rest van deze review op BBC CD recensies (Engels)

    Bron: BBC Music
  • Plaatser:Reino
  • Datum:06-09-2010
  • Laatst gewijzigd op:06-09-2010
  • Label:Thrill Jockey
  • Tags:
  • Gelezen:1
  • Reacties:0
  • stemmen:0
  • Bookmark and Share