| Title
|
Track Time
|
|
1.Offspring Are Blank
|
-- |
|
2.About to Die
|
-- |
|
3.Gun Has No Trigger
|
-- |
|
4.Swing Lo Magellan
|
-- |
|
5.Just from Chevron
|
-- |
|
6.Dance for You
|
-- |
|
7.Maybe That Was It
|
-- |
|
8.Impregnable Question
|
-- |
|
9.See What She Seeing
|
-- |
|
10.Socialites
|
-- |
|
11.Unto Caesar
|
-- |
|
12.Irresponsible Tune
|
-- |
Editorial Notes
After the supposed avant-garde accessibility and commercial
breakthrough of 2009's Bitte Orca -- an album that saw Solange
Knowles cover the R&B-tinged and hook-laden single "Stillness
in the Move" -- Swing Lo Magellan is the David Longstreth-led Dirty
Projectors' sixth studio album. Proclaiming that this is "an album
of songs, an album of songwriting," and despite the absence of
long-term collaborator Angel Deradoorian, Longstreth manages to
produce his most tender yet anthemic record to date. Spending
nearly 12 months recording and writing in an isolated house in the
rural solitude of Delaware County, New York, Longstreth forged
intimacy and spontaneity, and each track bursts with ideas and
warmth, but that's not to suggest that the fidgetiness and crashing
rhythms of their previous material are not there. Album opener
"Offspring Are Blank" starts with the band's calling card of
harmonies and sparse clicks and percussion before exploding into
life. Lead single "Gun Has No Trigger" has Longstreth's vocals
straining toward emphatic ecstasy with female vocal harmonies
cooing in the background, creating an unsettling yet rather content
experience. The carefree "Dance for You" genuinely exudes feelings
of joy and comfort with its light vocal melody, brief organ
interlude, and the simplicity of its trebly guitar refrain and drum
patterns. Amber Coffman takes a solo turn on "The Socialites," a
sweet and yearning R&B song with Coffman's persona gently
coming to the fore. The 12 tracks are sewn together in a way that
feels like a paean to the tradition of songwriting and the sheer
heartfelt joy of it -- summed up on the album closer,
"Irresponsible Tune," which shimmers like a vintage golden 1950s
rock & roll ballad. While some listeners might find the
Projectors' rather knowing idiosyncracy off-putting and smug, there
are songs here that suggest the band has finally found the formula
that finely balances its well-meaning musical intellectualism with
actual pop songs. ~ Aneet Nijjar
Format: Compact Disc
Released Date: July 10, 2012
Style: Pop/Rock
Number of Discs: 1
Stereo/Mono: Stereo
Studio/Mixed/Live: Studio
Label Name: Domino
UPC: 801390031229