Woods -
At Echo LakeI was recently talking to someone about music fads, and she brought up the previous lo-fi trend, expressing her weariness of it and how "all the bands sounded the same". Now, maybe we listened to a different batch of bands that fell under this broad umbrella, but still I couldn't disagree more. If anything, it seems to me like it was one of the more disjointed "movements" to come by in recent years. All that really united most of the bands was, basically, low fidelity recording quality. You had straight-up garage rock revival, Royal Trux-esque junk-rock, inhalant-damaged beach punk, something that sounded like Joy Division demos, homespun girl group pop, and just some downright abrasive, earsplitting, dissonant indie guitar rock. Oh, and then you had the hippie-ish, outdoors-y bands like Ganglians and Woods. Where Ganglians had a little bit of a Beach Boys vocal harmony slant going on, Woods utilize a singular, somewhat extreme falsetto, making for a pretty unique sound. At times when they pile on the guitar squall, Woods reminds me a little of early Mercury Rev, but only a little.
So anyway, I like Woods. I don't think they sound like anybody else, really, and yet there's something fairly familiar and comfortable about their music. They draw on a lot of the same hip influences that a lot of their peers do so there are some underlying similarities in that sense. On this album, they've made some very slight refinements on their formula, and that has its pros and cons. On the plus side, even when they get jammy, it's only for maybe a minute or two, nothing like the nine-minute snoozer "September with Pete" from
Songs of Shame. (Here they even get a little Krautrock-y on "From the Horn", but it's only two minutes long.) There are also some much more memorable and solid
songs this time around like "Blood Dries Darker", "Suffering Season", "Time Fading Lines", "Mornin' Time", and "Get Back". On the downside, they've essentially lost their edge. There's nothing particularly interesting or exciting here.
Songs of Shame seemed rife with potential, and that can be a virtue unto itself sometimes with new music. Now it seems like maybe they've stopped developing a little bit prematurely. It could just be that this is a transitional phase, and hopefully if they're stopped experimenting, they'll make up for it by refining their songcraft even more in the future.
Rating:
7.5/10