Caribou -
Swim (CD purchased 4/30/10)
Unlike a lot of people, I was pretty disappointed with Caribou's last album,
Andorra. The one before that,
The Milk of Human Kindness, saw him incorporate some Krautrock influence into his sunny electro-psychedelia, giving it a propulsive rhythmic foundation. It think it was possibly his best record, even better than
In Flames (the last album he put out under his old name, Manitoba, and his big breakout).
Andorra saw him go for a more subdued, vintage baroque pop sound (The Beach Boys, The Left Banke, The Zombies, etc.), and frankly, I thought it was pretty boring. Something about it was just too flat, too plastic. It revealed some problems in Dan Snaith's songwriting and arrangements that may have always been there and are still present on this record.
It's hard to define just what those are, unfortunately. It's the melodies, the sound of his voice... they just don't evoke much of anything. This being his "disco" album (and I'd say he's probably been listening to a little chillwave and other recent trends), it's more fun and more immediately likable than
Andorra - for me, anyway - but there's still that flatness. The beats aren't that good. The melodies aren't that good. The arrangements and the production are nice, but they often aren't enough. Surprisingly, I've found that I've begun liking this less than the Four Tet album from this year, which I initially found pretty underwhelming. Maybe it's really just his voice. I don't know. I'm not really big on singers having traditionally good voices, but Snaith's is especially nasally and weak. The music makes up for it at times - he cops a little Pantha du Prince on "Bowls", blends it pretty well with his own style, and thankfully doesn't sing. The closing track "Jamelia" also benefits greatly from having another vocalist who sounds more than a little like Avey Tare from Animal Collective. Unfortunately he feels the need to sing on most of the rest of the album, and I guess that's become a stylistic trademark of his, helping to set him apart from other electronic producers and link him more to indie rock. It wouldn't necessarily be a bad thing, but it just sounds so lackadaisical. Maybe he just needs to try harder.
Rating:
6.5/10