Rock/Pop
CD
Future Teenage Cave Artists
商品の情報
フォーマット |
CD |
---|---|
構成数 |
1 |
国内/輸入 |
輸入 |
パッケージ仕様 |
- |
発売日 |
2020年06月24日 |
---|---|
規格品番 |
JNR331 |
レーベル |
|
SKU |
753936905382 |
作品の情報
商品の紹介
The last time listeners heard from Deerhoof, they were fighting the good fight with 2017s Mountain Moves, a celebration of people uniting joyously and righteously in the name of solidarity. On Future Teenage Cave Artists, they explore what happens when that fight is lost. As Deerhoof dives into the messes that younger generations have to clean up, and arts role in the process, they sound rawer than they have in years. These songs are filled with intentionally frayed edges and jarring edits, as if they were created with whatever broken equipment the band could find after society collapsed. Its an approach thats both timely and familiar, echoing the fraught state of the world in the early 2020s as well as the relatively crude sound quality of Deerhoofs first album, 1997s The Man, the King, the Girl.
Future Teenage Cave Artists startling sound feels like a call to action, even if some of its most stunning songs document how humanity is continually thwarted by destructive impulses. The title track brilliantly depicts the eternal battle between progress and fear: Gonna leave a future treasure for all to see, Satomi Matsuzaki sings as keyboards and guitars ring out with idealism -- until Greg Saunier counters, But you stopped me/You stopped me, and the song crumbles. Theyre just as skilled at capturing the exact moment when hope is lost on Damaged Eyes Squinting into the Beautiful Overhot Sun, where the guitars that sounded like rays of optimism turn into a distortion-laden inferno. The contrasts that have always made Deerhoof thrillingly unlike any other band heighten the albums unpredictability, whether its the way the boogie-rock riffs jump out of the rubble on Sympathy for the Baby Boo or how the funky, dissonant O Ye Saddle Babes shifts from sounding like its from a forgotten Sesame Street episode from the 70s into something darker as it questions traditions. These clashes reach their combative peak on Farewell Symphony, a suite-like freakout that nods to Haydns Symphony No. 45 and grows more chaotic as it unfolds.
As disorienting as Future Teenage Cave Artists gets, it packs a potent emotional wallop. Theres as much empathy as frustration in its songs, particularly when Saunier sings lead. His raspy falsetto is soothingly flawed on The Loved One and downright haunted on Reduced Guilt when he sings Every morning I check if I have died over queasily lurching beats. Just as Deerhoof hark back to their formative days with Future Teenage Cave Artists recording techniques, they look forward with its oldest composition. The solo piano rendition of Bachs I Call on Thee that closes the album is all the more beseeching for its muffled sound quality, as if it were emanating from deep within a cave. Its a finale that doesnt promise a happy ending -- because Deerhoof cant. This artistic honesty, as well as the bands long-standing need to reflect and confront the worlds problems, make Future Teenage Cave Artists remarkable proof that their experiments are as crucial as ever. ~ Heather Phares
Rovi
収録内容
構成数 | 1枚
合計収録時間 | 00:36:03
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1.[CD]
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1.Future Teenage Cave Artists
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2.Sympathy for the Baby Boo
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3.The Loved One
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4.O Ye Saddle Babes
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5.New Orphan Asylum for Spirited Deerchildren
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6.Zazeet
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7.Fraction Anthem
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8.Farewell Symphony
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9.Reduced Guilt
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10.Damaged Eyes Squinting into the Beautiful Overhot Sun
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11.I Call on Thee
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