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 Post subject: Year In Review (18): The New Pornographers - Twin Cinema
PostPosted: Mon Dec 19, 2005 3:38 am 
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Average Metacritic score 84 (32 reviews, #21 overall):

http://www.lostatsea.net/review.phtml?i ... 65acd057c2

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The New Pornographers
Twin Cinema (Matador Records)
US release date: 23 August 2005
Rating: 10/10


I recently attended a book reading for pop culturist and SPIN columnist Chuck Klosterman, where the inevitable question was posed: "What new music are you listening to?" I'm sure wherever he goes, Chuck is hounded by music geeks trying to both 1.) Look cool in front of other bespeckled alpha males and 2.) Get a hot tip on a new band only half of the SPIN office has heard of. I'm also sure the answer he offered is the same, night after night: "I don't really listen to new music that much... I mean, whose life would be any different if they hadn't heard the new Arcade Fire album yet?"

It's hard to think of a rebuttal for this thought. Listening to music isn't a race, and as Klosterman pointed out, newness isn't a mark of quality. I, like everyone else in the Barnes and Noble non-fiction section that night, felt a little uneasy hearing these words come from someone we look to for analysis of contemporary culture; are we wasting our time reading record reviews, scanning Limewire and running out to check the new releases rack every Tuesday? Would our lives be different without new music?

After listening to Twin Cinema, I can assure you they would be.

At least, my life would be different. Since first hearing the album a week ago, I have been a happier person. I have been playing the fourteen tracks over and over again, and as a result, my disposition has been sunnier. Suddenly food tastes better, the stars shine brighter and my commute to work is a pleasure. My faith in the spirit of the times has been restored; I feel neither guilty nor cheap when I say I love all sorts of music that has been made within my lifetime, though the Klostermans of the world would have me believe Fleetwood Mac was the last important band. With Twin Cinema, The New Pornographers have elevated themselves from a band I really like to a band that I can't live without.

If my language is hyperbolic, it’s because The New Pornographers demand a certain amount of exaggeration. The Canadian collective does their thang bigger and better than any other similar act out nowadays, setting the standard for catchiness, quirkiness and edginess. The band is true to the term “super group,” in that they are all superior musicians who work together as a group to create a band greater than the sum of its parts: A.C. Newman, Dan Bejar and Neko Case all have credible solo careers going, but put them together in the same studio and you get albums like this one, packed with songs that could only be the result of fruitful collaboration.

Opener and title track, “Twin Cinema”, picks up where Electric Version left off, with crunching guitar riffs and the call and response style singing of Newman and Case et al. It is a treat to know that the kids are still alright, still playing their best hand of the power pop that made them so endearing on their first two albums.

From there, Twin Cinema hits its stride with “The Bones of an Idol” and moves into the sound that will more or less dictate the next 45 minutes. The song begins fairly slowly after the head-jerking pace of the first, with Ms. Case announcing, “Something keeps turning us on…” just as the piano jam downbeat hits. In proper New Pornographers style, the song moves from catchy to brilliant when the chorus comes in - or rather the lack thereof. Though there are about 17 singers appearing, the chorus has no lyrics, only some “OOOOOoooOOOs” to accompany the shimmering guitar.

“The Bones of an Idol” is only one of a dozen tracks on this album that shows off the New Pornographers’ dexterity. Dan Bejar has always been the ace in the hole for the group, acting as a studio member only and penning some of the band’s kookier tracks (see: “Jackie,” “Chump Change”). On Twin Cinema, Bejar sounds like a New Pornographer as never before, gelling with the group’s penchant for over-the-top-ness. “Jackie Dressed in Cobras” combines Bejar’s weirdly inviting vocals, Newman’s straight-time rock and a whole lot of instrumentation. It’s one of the disc’s finest tracks, and probably the best song Bejar has ever written.

Case, too, has her chance to shine more than ever. Her “These Are the Fables” is a reminder of how transcendent her voice is, as she transitions from backup falsetto to front-and-center chanteuse. The way she sings “Ten-thousand dancing girls kicking cans ‘cross the sky/No reason why/Why ask, prepare yourself for the call of the wild” is enough to make the track an instant mix tape hit.

The centerpiece, however, is without a doubt Newman’s brainchild, “The Bleeding Heart Show”; everything that you’ve come to know and love about the New Pornographers is compacted into 4:27, complete with a surprise ending. The track builds momentum slowly but surely, and you get the feeling the moderate pop façade will erupt at any moment into some glorious starburst of pop- and then it does. Around two minutes in, the “oooOOOOooos” return, gliding over the surface of the churning drums. It is a great, peaking moment for the song, the album and the band.

But the show is just beginning. After this graceful interlude, the finale kicks in… with traditional African chant. While the rest of the band (it sounds like it could be 50 people) sings their asses off with “HEY LAA HEY LAAs,” Neko Case gloriously declares, “We have arrived too late to play the Bleeding Heart Show.” If my iTunes counter is accurate, I’ve listened to this song over 20 times and I still get goose bumps every time I hear it.

The wave of euphoria doesn’t end there, either. Songs like “Sing Me Spanish Techno,” “Broken Breads” and “Stacked Crooked” each offer at least two memorable hooks apiece as they twist and turn through codas and choruses. Steadier arrangements like “Use It” and “The Jessica Numbers” don’t fall as far from the New Porno tree, but they prove how great a simple pop song can sound when taken seriously (but not too much so).

If Twin Cinema falters at all, it does so with “Falling Through Your Clothes,” which uses a snippet of music taken from the Electric Version era and would have been better suited as a B-side.

The New Pornographers may not change your life… they are just a band. You may want to even follow Klosterman’s three year rule and play it safe with your record collection. On the other hand, why would you want to hold out on hearing an album this good? I, for one, don’t know if the New Pornographers will stand the test of time, and to be honest, I don’t really care. While other critics wait around for Twin Cinema to be canonized, I’ll indulge myself in the immediacy of the CD.

--Reviewed by Andy Brown


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PostPosted: Mon Dec 19, 2005 7:47 am 
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Like it a LOT when I listen to it, but it doesn't stick like Neman's 2004 release.


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PostPosted: Mon Dec 19, 2005 10:58 am 
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It's a fun album. Not much meat, but very fun.

I dsagree with the "memorable hooks" comment. Tunes are catchy, yeah, but they evaporate into the ether minutes after I've heard them. Couldn't hum anything more than a few bars off the CD off the top of my head right now and I've probably heard it a couple times a week every week this year.


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PostPosted: Mon Dec 19, 2005 12:15 pm 
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Very good, the Dan Bejar and Neko Case track, Streets of Fire, remains better than anything Newman has done on either this one or Electric Version.


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PostPosted: Mon Dec 19, 2005 12:36 pm 
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frosted bing perry Wrote:
It's a fun album. Not much meat, but very fun.

I dsagree with the "memorable hooks" comment. Tunes are catchy, yeah, but they evaporate into the ether minutes after I've heard them. Couldn't hum anything more than a few bars off the CD off the top of my head right now and I've probably heard it a couple times a week every week this year.


i agree with the lack of hooks.
after about 10 listens i can't think of a single song lyric from the album, except "(something something) techno"

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PostPosted: Mon Dec 19, 2005 12:36 pm 
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i like it though.

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PostPosted: Mon Dec 19, 2005 1:24 pm 
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Sing Me Spanish Techno is still one of my favorite songs of the year.

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PostPosted: Mon Dec 19, 2005 2:48 pm 
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i find this album extremely catchy, which not only propels it into my top 5, but also keeps it from reach #1 -- feels like all desert with little meal.

anyway, love it, possibly their best yet. now bring on bejar and neko's new disc!

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PostPosted: Mon Dec 19, 2005 8:14 pm 
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Surprised that this album didn't get more love, as it is one of Obner's biggest bands. I think it's OK but nothing to write home about.

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PostPosted: Mon Dec 19, 2005 8:17 pm 
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I really like this album too, but I agree with the lack of hooks. I still have this in my top 5, though.


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PostPosted: Mon Dec 19, 2005 8:24 pm 
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i don't know about this album... it's still on my i-pod but i've been debating about deleting it. just didn't get to me.

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PostPosted: Mon Dec 19, 2005 8:25 pm 
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paladisiac Wrote:
i find this album extremely catchy, which not only propels it into my top 5, but also keeps it from reach #1 -- feels like all desert with little meal.


Desert or Dessert?

Either way, I'm with you on your opinion. Top 5, I like it a lot. But initially I did kind of feel the way frosted does i.e. lack of memorable hooks. I don't anymore though. Songs like The Jessica Numbers and Sing Me Spanish Techno stay with me.

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PostPosted: Mon Dec 19, 2005 8:26 pm 
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BeeOK Wrote:
Surprised that this album didn't get more love, as it is one of Obner's biggest bands. I think it's OK but nothing to write home about.


I think everyone burnt themselves out on this when it came out - there were like 4 new threads a day at the time

i dunno, it's nice, but nice isnt enough to make me listen to it again very often


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PostPosted: Mon Dec 19, 2005 8:59 pm 
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Best of the year. A definite grower, but i now feel like it is a tremendous sonic accomplishment. Lyrically a little weak, but maybe just odd (can anyone really explain Bejar's lyrics?). This is definitely a band coming into its own.


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PostPosted: Mon Dec 19, 2005 9:05 pm 
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splates Wrote:
I think everyone burnt themselves out on this when it came out - there were like 4 new threads a day at the time


I thought it was smashing when it came out... but then I got annoyed with its relentless pop-savy. I react to this the way I react to Arcade Fire or the Shins... great respect for the craft and study of influences, but there is something that is both cloying and too slippery.

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PostPosted: Mon Dec 19, 2005 10:09 pm 
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Love it. Love it. Love it.

Don't know how else to say it. Hearing these songs - and then seeing them live - it felt like watching the Los Angeles Lakers from 83-88; an all-star-calibre team operating at the peek of their abilities.

There's no bad tracks and "Broken Beads," "Sing Me Spanish Techno," "Stacked Crooked" and "The Bleeding Heart Show" are like audio endorphines. THey make life seem better just because of their existence and the fact I get to hear them.

Without question, my album of the year.

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PostPosted: Mon Dec 19, 2005 10:13 pm 
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swiateck Wrote:
it felt like watching the Los Angeles Lakers from 83-88


What a coincidence. For me, the New Pornos are like A.C. Green…they get no play.

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PostPosted: Tue Dec 20, 2005 2:33 am 
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I like it more with each listen. It probably started at the bottom ten of my list, but has worked its way up to top ten.

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PostPosted: Tue Dec 20, 2005 3:30 am 
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swiateck Wrote:
Love it. Love it. Love it.

Don't know how else to say it. Hearing these songs - and then seeing them live - it felt like watching the Los Angeles Lakers from 83-88; an all-star-calibre team operating at the peek of their abilities.

There's no bad tracks and "Broken Beads," "Sing Me Spanish Techno," "Stacked Crooked" and "The Bleeding Heart Show" are like audio endorphines. THey make life seem better just because of their existence and the fact I get to hear them.

Without question, my album of the year.


Bless you.


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