カントリーやブルーズといった要素を現代的にアップデートさせた「音響カントリー」と評される音楽性でその名を知らしめたレッド・レッド・ミートのフロントマン、ティム・ルーティリー率いるバンド、CALIFONE。約3年ぶりとなるアルバム『VILLAGERS』をJEALOUS BUTCHER RECORDSよりCDリリース。
キャプテン・ビーフハート、1970年代のAMラジオから流れるロック / ポップ・ミュージック、そして壊れたデジタル・サウンドをインスピレーションの源とし生み出されたニューアルバムです。
発売・販売元 提供資料(2023/04/13)
No one would have expected Tim Rutili to embrace yacht rock as an influence, and that hasnt happened yet, but his tenth album under the Califone rubric, 2023s Villagers, does suggest hes been listening to a lot of 1970s soft rock and letting the influence soak in. Of course, when Rutili was drawing on the blues in his earlier work, Califone still sounded like hed filtered the structures through his fertile imagination, and Villagers is soft rock bent into new forms informed by his angular sonic experimentalism. "McMansions" is languid on the surface, but the occasional off-kilter bursts of guitar skronk and fiddle screech add a compelling grit. The late-night piano ballad "Comedy," punctuated with a polished horn arrangement, is married to a lyric full of violence and regret. The acoustic guitar and Latin percussion backing to "Sweetly" sounds as easy as Sunday morning, but the story is a pitiless remembrance of a relationship broken beyond repair, and the darker it gets, the more the music bends to the mood. The push and pull of form and content is something Rutili has always done well, and the skillful instrumental execution on Villagers extends even to the many sonic left turns; they may seem unexpected but make perfect sense in context, like a gunshot that happens just when its most dramatically effective. The opening track, "The Habsburg Jaw," shows he hasnt forgotten how to put his more eccentric leanings up front once in a while, even if theyre (just barely) held in place by a melody that could have been a great pop tune if hed wanted. Under Rutilis leadership, Califone has been one of the most satisfying acts in Chicagos post-rock community for over two decades, and with Villagers hes shown hes not out of interesting ideas and intriguing places to take them, even when hes letting the surfaces seem more engaging. ~ Mark Deming
Rovi