Autistic
Daughters
Uneasy Flowers CD (Kranky)

Drifty
and sparse, yet melodic indie rock kinda sounds from New Zealand guitarist/vocalist Dean
Roberts and his band. Uneasy Flowers
blurs the lines between your standard guitar/bass/drums/vocal kinda setup and
more bare-bones minimalist construction, much like the wonderful Low and their
mellow, shimmering moodiness. Similarly, Roberts' vocals and lyrics are somber
and soft-spoken, yet more prominent and focused than in his past work. Uneasy Flowers is a thematic album, with
all tracks linked together lyrically. The subject is a character called Rehana,
whose path is traced and described as a nomadic and ragged figure with a sort
of tragic outlook. Looking for something a little on the sad and lonely side?
Autistic Daughters provides the soundtrack, with a nicely subtle air and plenty
of rich, gauzy textures.
- Todd Zachritz
(3 Stars)
Autechre
Quaristice CD (Warp)

There's
plenty of electronic-based acts that attempt to 'humanize' their machines, to
coax real emotion from their gadgetry. Well, influential British duo Autechre
are not of this mindset, whatsoever. For 15 years now, Rob Brown and Sean Booth
have subverted and pushed the limits of (what some would call) 'techno' music
into far-out abstractions, damaged beats, and alien soundscapes. Now, after
confounding their audiences with the impenetrable algorithmic programming and
skittering beats of their 2005 LP Untitled,
they return to more, umm, listenable forms of electronica on the 20-track Quaristice. From proto-ambient pieces
(the desolate yet lovely--and almost melodic-- 'Notwo') to industrial-like
cutups ('Fol3') to blippy, mutant hip-hop ( 'fwzE' ), they cover a lot of
ground on this 73-minute monsterpiece. In fact, most of these pieces are
relatively short, and all seem to be individual sketches of textures put into
sound format. Autechre create and inhabit entirely foreign worlds within their
machinery, and this imaginative and quirky blend of styles and disorienting
moods is both fun and evocative.
- Todd Zachritz (3 Stars)
Alan
Vega –
Station CD (Blast First/Mute)

Wow,
the legendary vocalist for NYC hellraisers Suicide is back with a scalding,
scathing, and fiery album of fearsome grooves and sharp commentary on his
homeland's social and political condition. The ominous knife on the cover says
it all. Personally, I think Vega's work with Finnish minimalist
electro-noise-sculptors Pan Sonic has been an inspiring move, as tracks like
'13 Crosses 16 Blazin' Skulls' (my favorite cut here)
are surgically-precise blasts of gut-level analogue rhythms boxes and
blistering digital noise, with Vega's invective commentary legibly
spoken/shouted on top. This is also a logical and faithful continuation of
Vega's classic mid-70's work with Martin Rev as Suicide, all unhinged analogue
electronics and madman yelps. In 'Devastated', Vega's proclamation of 'How's
the future gonna play out for our kids!' is intense and proves that not all of
us turn mellow and wishy-washy with age. 'Psychopatha' is a disturbingly funky
urban nightmare set to industrial drums and hypnotic noise. Pretty intense and
paranoia-inducing stuff, complete with Vega's raving maniac shouts and
mutterings. As dangerous and experimental as anything in Vega's impressive
30-year back catalogue, 'Station' is tuned to the frequency of America circa
2008 A.D., on the edge of socio-economic collapse and growing consumer
distrust. Vega's never been so necessary or relevant.
-Todd Zachritz (5 Stars)
Howlin Rain
Magnificent Fiend
CD (Birdman/American)

Ethan Miller's other band, Comets On Fire, is pretty
well-known in freaky folksy psychedelic circles for their overdriven lysergic
space rock. But rather than mine one classic rock avenue, Miller chooses to
branch out a bit with his other group, Howlin Rain. Here, he gets to tighten up
and write straightforward organic (some would say hydroponic, even) rock
"hits" (pun intended), inspired more by late-60's/early 70's-style
stoner rock. You know, the kind they used to make before everything went 'metal'
or 'punk'. Tight and bluesy, Magnificent
Fiend brings to mind a bright Summer day, with the top down, rollin' (hmm,
another pun) around town with nothin' better to do. 'Lord Have Mercy' is so groovy
it would make the Black Crowes jealous. Yes, this is the real thing. Longhair
rock isn't dead, it just went back underground. Howlin Rain are bringing it
back up!
- Todd Zachritz (2 Stars)