Dan Snaith's UP IN FLAMES (recorded under the name Manitoba) was a surprise critical hit in 2003, and proved Snaith not only conversant with noise-heavy trance rock, electronica, and arty indie pop, but capable of synthesizing these elements with a vibrant, postmodern flair that brought something new to the mix. Two years and a name change later, Snaith (recording now under the name Caribou) reappeared with THE MILK OF HUMAN KINDNESS. On it he raises the bar significantly, widening his stylistic palette, opening up his productions, adding layers of percussion and effects, and creating a work of beauty and individuality. MILK is quite atmospheric, with swaths of organic psychedelia, digital ambience, shoegazer guitar swirl, and metronomic, Kraut rock-inspired groove (the latter, especially, on "A Final Warning" and "Bees"). Snaith's vocal tracks fit nicely alongside the instrumentals. The restrained verses of "Yeti," the album's gentle-aggressive opener, and the minor-key folk drone in "Hello Hammerheads" somehow complement the hip-hop music box collages of "Lord Leopard" and "Narrow Pelicans." While this may all sound like random, stylistic overload on paper, the overall result--a pulsing, multi-textured, artfully conducted mind-ride--makes for an extremely rewarding listen.|
Rovi
UKの名門レーベル、リーフの看板アーティストであるマニトバが改名し、カリブーとなっての新作は、これまた目眩がするほどにサイケデリックなストレンジ・エレクトロニカの大傑作。丁寧なアレンジ、突然のノイズ、美しいハーモニー、解体された楽曲構造など、掴みどころがないのにすべてのサウンドが眩い光を放つポップ・ソングは、ノイ!や想い出波止場のようにも聞こえる。極楽ハンマー・ビートは未来まで打ち続けられる。
bounce (C)久保 正樹
タワーレコード(2005年04月号掲載 (P74))