AC listening in lead up to TS (Last Wk: Buoys, Homies, BtQ,


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roopn
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Post Posted:

Agreed with above sentiment, this thread has been so good. I haven't really been listening along that closely, but the chance to indulge each era together has been really sweet.
opposite field wrote:
Going from AC album to AC album it can often feel like they're jumping around dramatically but when you trace the lines through all of the solo and side project records you can start to connect the dots and see where it all comes together as one piece of the bigger picture.

And this is one of my favourite effects of the discussion. Until maybe 2 or 3 months ago I had never understood the chromaticism of the timeline, and this thread and everyone's thoughts have pulled that further into focus
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roopn
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Post Posted:

N peed
blindmowing wrote:
just have to say this journey has been more than sufficient in biding my time waiting for Skiffs

how is it New Years Eve? not that i want to stop time because i'm still impatient for TS, but i'm lamenting the fact i'm two weeks behind on this listening schedule and kinda -- weirdly -- want time to stop for a bit so i can catch up and give these albums their due???

dio wrote:
shout out to this thread in general... I got over my thing of not wanting to listen to early stuff for various reasons and been digging all of it...

got spirit/danse double-cd for car and it mostly sounds amazing... I wanna get Ark on cd too... MPP era feels familiar in a way pre-SJ stuff hasn't for a while so its been sick af digging back in and just chilling with these stone cold classics I hadn't heard in forever

ODDSAC is MPP era's secret masterpiece. Those songs are insane.. dont really fit into a single era... like wild SJ/MPP overlap studio-only madness.

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foxtrot
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Post Posted:

opposite field wrote:
A few weeks late so sorry to mix up the timeline here but I found a copy of Dead Drunk yesterday and am listening to maybe the first time? or at least the first time in nearly a decade. The disc I got says recorded in 2005 and to me this album kind of feels like the lost bridge between Feels and SJ. Coming off the prettiness of Feels its cool to hear Avey playing all of these harsh and grotesque Black Dice type sounds and plant the seeds for that vibe that would come out on Strawberry Jam. In foxtrot's posts on this album he mentioned how cool it is to have things like this in their wider discography and I totally agree. Going from AC album to AC album it can often feel like they're jumping around dramatically but when you trace the lines through all of the solo and side project records you can start to connect the dots and see where it all comes together as one piece of the bigger picture.

Alright back to your regular programming here.

Yeh, albums like this are such curious pieces of the puzzle. This album really helps flesh out that transition from Feels to SJ. Like Avey used TT to try out some the dry/harsh textures and atmospheres that would become a defining part of the SJ sound.
blindmowing wrote:
just have to say this journey has been more than sufficient in biding my time waiting for Skiffs

how is it New Years Eve? not that i want to stop time because i'm still impatient for TS, but i'm lamenting the fact i'm two weeks behind on this listening schedule and kinda -- weirdly -- want time to stop for a bit so i can catch up and give these albums their due???



Stick with us blindmowing! Totally understand that the holiday period is crazy but I have loved reading your thoughts over the last few weeks. So glad people have embraced this. I have loved every minute of it.
dio wrote:
shout out to this thread in general... I got over my thing of not wanting to listen to early stuff for various reasons and been digging all of it...

ODDSAC is MPP era's secret masterpiece. Those songs are insane.. dont really fit into a single era... like wild SJ/MPP overlap studio-only madness.

dio, this is fucking awesome. so happy that this thread and our collective journey through the discography has helped you lift the lid on some of their incredible early stuff. I can't wait to listen/watch ODDSAC this week. It has been ages.
roopn wrote:
Agreed with above sentiment, this thread has been so good. I haven't really been listening along that closely, but the chance to indulge each era together has been really sweet.
opposite field wrote:
Going from AC album to AC album it can often feel like they're jumping around dramatically but when you trace the lines through all of the solo and side project records you can start to connect the dots and see where it all comes together as one piece of the bigger picture.

And this is one of my favourite effects of the discussion. Until maybe 2 or 3 months ago I had never understood the chromaticism of the timeline, and this thread and everyone's thoughts have pulled that further into focus

It's great to know that people are enjoying it and engaging with it even if they're not getting the time to post and/or put together big write ups. Just knowing that some of the CA fam is enjoying the same collection of material from the same era at the same time for the same vague reason is fantastic.


Alright, I went a bit nuts (and took a bit of a walk down memory lane) for Merriweather Post Pavilion...

MPP:

I know it’s a new week now but I just couldn’t let this one pass without sneaking in a more detailed track by track write up. It is, after all, my favourite album of all time.

My first listen to MPP was pretty special. Really special. Actually, it was the greatest listening experience of my life. Some of you have been reading my write ups for previous albums. The short story is that Sung Tongs captured the freedom and frivolity of my early 20s. Feels captured the thrill of romance and passion when I fell for my wife. Strawberry Jam captured a certain intense, peak period of my fandom. Well, when MPP came out it became my ‘becoming an adult’ album. I followed the boots throughout 2007/2008. I got married to the woman that I will always associate with this album (and Feels) in 2008. Then we moved to Japan together. Our plan was to spend a year-long honeymoon enjoying Japan, then to move back to Australia to start a family.

MPP came at the absolute perfect time. Christmas 2008. I was deeply in love. I felt like I was in a transition period – truly entering adulthood. I was enjoying the best year of my life. I was excited yet nervous about the future and the idea of starting a family and taking on the responsibility of becoming a Dad.

My wife and I were staying in Hakuba, a small village in the Japanese Alps just outside of Nagano. I had been anticipating the album for a long time and I guess my life and my relationship with the band were both at an all time high. The album freebirded and it was late at night (around midnight) when I found out. I told my wife that I HAD to have a special first listen. So I rugged up in my parka, beanie, gloves etc. and headed out into the dead of a perfectly still night in Hakuba, Japan. The moment In The Flowers began I got goosebumps. It wasn’t just the cold.

The opening surge of sound and the ‘you can dance’ sample just ripped through me. Those synthesised guitar notes fading in. It was immediately evident that the band had outdone themselves with the clarity and beauty of the production. I started walking slowly through the snow, soaking up the moment. The sweet little wordless vocal part after the first ‘she walked up with a flower and I cared’ had me tingling. If I could just leave my body for the…

BOOM.

I started crying.

This was an absolute peak moment of my life. This song was just perfection. The ‘drop’ such a grand and satisfying moment on an album full of them.

People often talk about MPP sounding really ‘aquatic’ and I totally agree about the ‘water’ side of that. But for me, a lot of the album feels like frozen water. Snow and Ice. Delicate and crystalline and brilliant. Glistening, radiant beauty.

My Girls was already a huge favourite from the boots. It was my ‘this will be me soon’ song. Mindfulness. Contentment. Absorbing myself in the love for my wife and my future family. Looking forward to the simple, earnest pleasure of domesticity. This song has received so much airtime, yet it still floors me. It is probably the definitive MPP track in a lot of ways. Thumping beats and low end, arpeggiated synth chords, layered vocals that Panda and Avey share etc. The synchronicity that they have on this album beat Lennon/McCartney for me. They were so beautifully in tune with each other. They buoy each other on this album. It is so heartening and also just fucking spectacular to witness. The melody in this song is absolute perfection. The sentiment so real and so affecting. The pulse so infectious and captivating. Two years later, my wife gave birth to our first child (a daughter) and this song became even more than it once was.

Then Also Frightened swoops in and mirrors all my hopes and fears around parenthood. The intro shakers are a great example of the winter/snow feel I mentioned earlier. Sure, it is influenced by my first listen experience, but it is there. The layers in this song are so rich. The harmonies are gorgeous and the fecund arrangement is a joy to behold. The bridge section where they repeat the song title is one of my all-time favourite AC moments. The way the ride cymbal comes in and the vocals lift is a moment of heavenly transcendence. Yes boys. I am also frightened. But that’s what leads to reward. Honestly, this song helped me truly accept that fear and risk are an essential part of reward and accomplishment. Especially when it comes to parenting.

Summertime Clothes is just a straight banger. It always gets me bouncing. It reminds me of humid summer nights in Japan. My wife and I would stay out late, jump from izakaya to karaoke bar to street food stall and just revel in the joy and freedom of our time there. Our rent was subsidised and we had heaps of disposable income and no dependents. Good times. Summertime Clothes is those good times.

Daily Routine is this perfect moment that captures both the awe-inspiring beauty and groundhog monotony of raising kids. Moments of sheer joy and love like you have never known and moments of sheer exhaustion and tedium like you have never known. The way the opening arpeggio slowly creeps in and then speeds up is one of the album’s most ingenious moments. The percussion in this song is so simple yet completely blows my mind every time. The backing vocals in the chorus (‘jerrp jerrp’!) are a favourite little detail. By this point Noah was just an absolute grand master of melody. MPP was the moment the band became a whole lot more than Avey songs with the occasional Panda song to break it up. Noah was a fucking force on this album. The second half of the song is the most blissful and accurate interpretation of that torpid, lucid dreaming state when you just need a few more moments under the covers. It is also another example of AC’s impeccable sequencing. A gorgeous come down moment after the thrilling ride through the opening tracks.

Bluish – one of the sweetest love songs of all. My wife has curly hair. And yeh, I knew about Kria but just to hear him sing that line (repeatedly) on an album of songs that I already knew and had strongly associated with my own life. When even the new, studio only track immediately stabbed me straight in the heart. Holy fuck. And all the tinkling key and bell sounds in the chorus. And the snow. And my wife back in our cabin. At this point during my first listen I had already decided that this was my greatest album of all time. 13 years later and it still is.

I just can’t ever get over the quality of the sound on this album. Everything is so crystal-like - twinkling and vivid and dazzling. Every time.

Guy’s Eyes is the epitome of this era’s live shows. That dense, trance-like repetition. Thick beats, captivating, hypnotic vocals. The shows from this era just put you under a spell. Guy’s Eyes does a brilliant job of letting you into that world whilst still delivering a punchy pop tune. The beats, flutes, piano parts are all incredible and the vocals unveil some new little flourish every listen. A track that deserves more credit and a track that never ceases to carry me into an altered state of consciousness. Also, another gorgeous expression of love and desire.

Taste is THE FUCKING BEST! The dub influence coming through. The alternate vocals making the whole thing feel like two different songs happening at the same time. Another melody for the ages and another production effort that just rips my face apart every time. Great Person Pitch style lyrics about how we define ourselves too. Avey wrote a great song here. And then Panda added the most glorious otherworldly magic over the top. I think I need to just do that thing where you silently pump your fist and grit your teeth and lose your shit in front of your computer for a second.

Lion In A Coma – such a brilliant, evocative, unique moment on the album. The main loop is so elastic and intriguing. The beats are so African. HOT TAKE: I have always thought this song was about Dave being nervous about how he expressed himself and/or performed in the sack. I feel like he is talking about how he is able to create freely and without any apprehension musically but he struggles to do the same during sex. What a thrilling and fascinating way to express that sentiment. This song is a blast.

No More Runnin again really reminds me of the snow and the village that night. The twinkling piano is like gentle snow fall and the ‘matchstick’ sounding percussion reminds me of crunchy footsteps in the snow. I was still wandering through the village and soaking up every moment of brilliance. This song is about settling down. Another perfectly timed moment for me. I had been married for about 8 months when this came out and I could have written these words myself. Such a tender and heart-warming song. Noah again elevates this to heavenly levels with his harmonies.

Brother Sport – when an album of non-stop, five star, faultless masterpieces that provide endless sonic entertainment whilst also moving you emotionally time and time again finishes with the BIGGEST FUCKING BANGER and possibly best track on the album… holy flaming testicles of a bison! Back to my first listen story, when Bro Sport started, I had found an amazing little Shinto shrine. I had to walk up a couple of hundred steps to get to the torii at the top. As I walked up the steps the hypnotic intensity of Brother Sport’s middle section accompanied me. I seriously didn’t give a fuck that the screams had been dropped for the album version at this point. This album had done more than enough. Beyond belief really. I sat at the top while the final ‘halfway to fully grown’ section played out. I patted myself on the back for committing to this midnight walk in the snow. I hadn’t seen another individual the whole time. Just lost in the majesty of this album. And Brother Sport sounded so fucking good (still does). Then it seemed like it was ending. I must admit I had a moment of feeling slightly let down that the album didn’t finish on a bang. The live versions had been so powerful. I started to slowly make my way back down the steps as things seemed like they were closing down. And then the fucker KICKED BACK IN!! And with that final climatic moment AC blew my mind one last time on my first listen to MPP. What blows my mind still is that this album has stayed with me. It has accompanied me through the last 13 years of marriage and parenthood and it has continued to thrill me and comfort me in equal measure.
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foxtrot
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Post Posted:

CHz:

Centipede Hz suffers purely by comparison to what came before. It may not be at the same level as MPP, SJ, Feels, Sung Tongs or Arc (nothing else is) but it is still better than most music out there. Those 5 albums were the greatest run in music history for me. Five 5 star classics in a row. CHz is a solid, even great, 4 star album.

They were big at this point. Festival headliners. I don't think we can't discount that when you look at the direction they went in. Yes, they've always been a band that has done their own thing and their restless spirit is a massive part of their appeal for me. That said, I don't think it is entirely a coincidence that the band went in the more stadium rock direction that they did on this record. Maybe just purely as a result of playing live to larger audiences and feeding off that energy. Maybe larger, more passionate crowds just naturally led them to start exploring more arena ready versions of their sound.

In any case, the bottom line is that I love the sounds of CHz and it is a great album of distinctive electro-rock that I love blasting and singing along to. That said, it has never quite had the massive emotional resonance that the previous 5 albums had for me.

It's dense, aggressive, melodic, frantic, cohesive, and it has the amazing idiosyncratic sound that only AC can muster.

I think it just suffered a little from feeling overstuffed. The live boots had a certain rawness and sense of space that actually helped INCREASE the sense of aggression. I think the dense production in the end made it feel a little claustrophobic and less cathartic than it might otherwise have been. That said, its still packed with great songs and I have a lot of fun listening to it, even 9 years on. Emotionally, I think the band were struggling a bit after MPP. I sense a lot of tension in these songs. Which is cool. It is just different. And I think they were certainly in a different place to where I was at in 2012.

Moonjock is a big, dynamic rocker. Today's Supernatural is a great 'Avey as the circus ringleader' kind of track. Rosie Oh is really underrated and has a fascinating structure. Applesauce is a brilliant piece of complex experimental pop. Wide Eyed is probably the most lyrically affecting track for me. Just to see Deakin flourish with his first proper AC track and have it be about embracing growth and change was so heartening and awesome. Father Time is classic Avey tune and works really well in this record's context.

I have no idea why people seem to hang shit on NTB and Monkey Riches. For me they are the centrepieces of the album. The Fireworks/Rev Green or Purple Bottle/Banshee of CHz. NTB is so moody and colossal. It is like Tomboy turned up to 11 and I FUCKING LOVE IT. When the chord changes at around 3:24 I lose my everloving shit very time. Goosebump moment. Monkey Riches isn't some hackneyed romp that bludgeons you to death. I think it has real intensity and power and it’s a great combination of the dry aggressive SJ sounds and the dancey, techno sparkle of MPP’s most beat driven tracks. Mercury Man is a quintessential AC track. It could have been on Feels or SJ easily. Pulleys is a cool mid tempo number. I dig the textural shifts. Amanita is a bombastic, climatic finish with a classic rapid fire Avey melody at the end. Solid AF album!

Buuuuuuutttt, I do think that swapping the b-sides (Honeycomb, Gotham and Crimson) for the studio-only tracks (Moonjock, Applesauce, Pulleys, Amanita) could have had very interesting results for the overall feel of the album. Like I said earlier, something rawer and sparser that might have shifted things away from the cluttered alien radio broadcast theme and towards a more woody, organic sound.

Don’t get me wrong though, this is still an album I very much enjoy.

(P.S. AC's worst album cover by a long way :( )
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captainlunatic



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Post Posted:

Excellent write-up on MPP. I think more than anything I love how good that album makes me feel. There aren't a whole lot of reasons to be optimistic anymore, but when I listen to MPP I think everything might actually work out beautifully and happily and wonderfully. It's such an amazing sonic world to visit, and I'm very thankful it exists
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nothingmaster


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Post Posted:

blasted merriweather on my turntable and man it really is a miracle of production. they pushed the sound to this absurd size, yet it sounds so warm and organic. the samples are particularly masterfully applied, in how they instantly create this evocative world for the rest of the sonics to blend with.
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blindmowing


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Post Posted:

MPP

just a few notes before i move on:

because the mixing on this record is such a fucking mind trip it's so fascinating to listen to this album for all of the LAYERS...every listen can be a vastly different experience depending on what you focus on

the background effects on this thing are wild... give this a listen some time to ONLY listen to the random effects going on in the background if you haven't...it'll blow your mind

my most recent listen focused on Panda's drums. i'm sure there's some drum machine in there, but there is also A LOT of Panda drumming, and he spends a lot of it playing on the rims...

-- almost every song has at least a few moments where he's just doing rim shots

-- there's an incredible detail i'd always missed on "Taste." the muddy kick drum (?) is constantly lagging and OFF BEAT. it's so disorientating and hypnotizing if you get locked in on it, because it goes without fail a microsecond off, then a microsecond back on beat, and keeps looping this off/on beat thing and it's a super small detail that will absolutely make the song for me every time i listen now

-- the scratching noises on "Bluish" are gold (1:28-1:45 for example)

-- almost impossible to pick a favorite off this record. every song is perfect. "No More Runnin" takes it for me today. one of the greatest "tune out" tracks...so easy to follow that gorgeous melody around a little bog, the frogs ribbiting and the sound of boots squishing through the mud

-- said this not too long ago, but the first 15 seconds of "Also Frightened" is peak AC
Last edited by blindmowing on Sun Jan 02, 2022 2:00 am, edited 1 time in total.
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dio



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Post Posted:

blindmowing wrote:
MPP

my most recent listen focused on Panda's drums. i'm sure there's some drum machine in there, but there is also A LOT of Panda drumming, and he spends a lot of it playing on the rims...

-- almost every song has at least a few moments where he's just doing rim shots (1:28-1:45 for example)

ok agreed about Also Frightened opening (and outro) but love that yr shouting out the super detailed and nuance panda drumming. I think people do assume this is a more programmed-beats style album from them cuz it often feels to poppy/hip hoppy nearly, but theres so many wonderful a tip-tapping from p-bear the whole damn time. so tasty
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Post Posted:

Finally listened to Down There. Always have liked this album a lot and never understood the muted reaction/vitriol around release. The first two songs have Avey at his most emotional and then his most melodic, a perfect contrast between the two. Oliver Twist may go a little overboard on vocal effects to some, but the song is great once you get to know it. What a melody!

The piano at the end of glass bottom boat is amazing. Ghost of Books is super cool, I feel like it’s a lot more almost hip-hop sounding than most AC tracks, aside from Avey’s strange vocals. Cemeteries feels like slowly canoeing at night past a… well, cemetery. Love that feeling. Heads Hammock has such a uniquely cool beat, loved hearing it live in 2019. I feel like the bridge could be sampled in a popular song or something for some reason. Also makes me think of alligators in the sewers haha. The two closing tracks are wonderful, some of Avey’s best solo songs in my opinion.

Love the swampy theme running throughout it. I’ve lived in Florida most of my life and it reminds me of taking kayaks or glass bottom boats (lol) and looking for alligators. Obviously there’s a lot more going on emotionally here in terms of relationships ending, but to me it’s a wonderous, swampy experience that brings me back to my childhood
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roopn
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Post Posted:

Foxtrot: awesome write up on MPP. What a special moment for your first listen. I love that after so long the album still makes you so giddy. I'm curious, did you share the album with your wife, or is she ambivalent to AC?

One thought on mpp: as it was one of my first AC albums I took this for granted: the vocals sound absolutely unreal. Avey and PB's voices are so distinct to me generally speaking, but they blend so perfectly on here. Both of their voices sound so muscular and soaring and masc and femme, there are so many moments where the vocals alone take your breath away. Panda's backing ohh's in the flowers chorus, NOT NOOOOOWWWWWW in also frightened, when the SUNgoesdownwellgooutagain, pretty much all of my girls, many many many more
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Post Posted:

Centipede Hz: as someone who used to not think much of this album, how do people not like this album? well, i mean, i know how, demoitis is a hell of a thing, and even aside from that, 2010s AC seems to be the decade's worth of music everyone loves to hate, but still, HOW?!

the story behind me getting into this album is that i listened to it a couple times in 2016, not getting much out of it other than "hey Monkey Riches is pretty good" and "holy SHIT how have i gone this long without hearing Wide Eyed i have GOT to listen to that album Deakin just released * ", and then one day in 2020, i thought to myself "i wanna listen to Live at 9:30, but i haven't familiarized myself with most of these songs so i should probably do that" and then i did and, well, the rest is history

first of all, i love the aesthetic of this album. the alien radio broadcast theme is endearing in my eyes, and the sample work massages my brain folds in a way that no other album really does. and yeah, i know this is their arena rock album, but it sure as hell ain't Imagine Dragons. the songwriting is amazing too, like, yeah, this is just a really good collection of pop songs, though that's hardly a new thing for our dynamic quartet. from the road trip song Moonjock to the hiking trip (or, if you prefer, shroom trip) song Amanita, i've come to love just about every song on here, with MAYBE the exception of Father Time and Mercury Man (yes, i'm a Pulleys enjoyer, completely disregard my opinions accordingly) and my favorites continue to be Wide Eyed and Monkey Riches

i just think this is a really solid album and it's insane to me that so many people who love their four-album hot streak hate this one so much. it kinda Hz, you know?

* hey guess what i still haven't done

and now, my ranking of the three Centipede Hz b-sides, two of which i've barely heard until now!
  • 3. Honeycomb: hey, it's not a bad song, but the bronze medal has to go to someone. pretty good but i can see why they left it off
    2. Gotham: this song is just gorgeous. makes me feel like i'm floating in space. might have made a better closer than Amanita
    1. Crimson: okay now i'm REALLY having a "why the hell was this not on the album" moment
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Post Posted:

the CHz b-sides were so much more special to me than the album, I must have listened to each of them more than any album track when they first came out. when the Honeycomb/Gotham single surprise dropped I had randomly decided to do a juice fast for a day and then smoke a ton of weed so I remember the raw/voracious sound of them perfectly matched the rumbling hunger I was feeling in my stomach. but also honestly Honeycomb's harmonies were a perfect segue from the MPP to Centipede sound, with the "all the impossible places you'll go in your liiiiife LIIIFE LIIIIFE" part at the end really taking off in a way that a lot of the best moments of MPP did. but it also signaled the start of something new which was very exciting at the time as well

Gotham was also incredible, it kind of reminds me of Street Flash in terms of the garbled samples and abstract textures. so much attention to detail in that song as with most things the band has done. also loved that line about the ficus. and then Crimson, CHz's missing ballad moment, came as a bonus after I had already exhaustively played out the album tracks and was still craving more AC, so I put it on loop for basically a whole day and it really delivered

I don't get the sense that people hate on CHz around here, I think most agree it is a solid album, but for me and I think many others it was the first in a long run of AC albums that didn't inspire that "OMG THIS IS THE BEST THING THEY'VE EVER DONE" feeling so I think it's only natural for people who had been following the band for awhile to feel a little bit let down. I actually love pretty much every song on the album, even Monkey Riches which I consider to be the weakest. some people find Today's Supernatural to be gimmicky but I thought it was a fantastic first single, and NTB was particularly transcendent. a lot of the other songs like Moonjock, Applesauce and Amanita felt very visceral in this knotted, earthy way, which is a bit strange considering the theme was extraterrestrial but I think it worked. I think the album's only weakness is that there's just too much going on, unlike on the b-sides it doesn't feel like every sound on the album truly earns its place there and I think the melodies could've benefitted from more stripped-back production
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Post Posted:

CHz - I loved the build up to this with the weekly broadcasts and Centipede Radio mixes. The record itself wasn't anticipated here with anything like the excitement and joy of MPP because we knew the songs weren't as good, but we got in the spirit. I was in Rome with my wife for our first holiday when we'd just started courting and I paid about seventy quid for roaming data to stream the Centipede Radio album playthrough while sitting in the bathroom in the middle of the night so I didn't wake her up.

Moonjock was a fun opener, reminded me of 90s altrock. Applesauce was great, so catchy! Take This Weight was fantastic, loved the new middle section. Pulleys was decent. Amanita outro sounded like, err, Coldplay. Everything else sounded as I'd remembered from the boots. By the time I'd got back from my hols, I felt like they were pushing themselves to keep moving in another direction but lacking the inspiration to find something as good as before. I totally respect that they didn't just make MPP2 and ride the tidal wave they'd created but this record fell short of everything they'd previously released.

Coming off MPP and his post-PP purple patch, Noah's songs here speak for themselves - a Tomboy offcut (albeit one I really like) and Rosie Oh, a song he himself thought was 'shit'. It's not the quality or quantity of his contributions to this record which are notable to me, it's his own perception of his involvement. Having driven MPP with arguably the best songs of his career, these were - to him - a couple of also-rans. Why did he feel so little investment? Tomboy was obviously an incredibly draining record, both in terms of the emotional investment of writing, performing and recording, plus the physical toll of touring, and the weight of expectations after PP and MPP. I completely understand and sympathise that he had little left in the tank and I wouldn't want him to be any more burned out than he was. Nevertheless, it's hard to argue that his presence, profile and songwriting aren't missed on CHz.

So it's Dave's record, then. That's nothing especially new. Some of their greatest albums are 'Dave's records', to use that phrasing. As band leader, did he make the record he wanted to, in that case? We've talked plenty in the past about the desert rock/alien radio concepts and whether the songwriting and tracklisting satisfied this brief, I won't dredge that up. I'll just say that it's always struck me as significant that Dave had another crack at it with Slasher Flicks before he was ready to move on. There's a killer 90s altrock album somewhere within the CHz and SF eras, but there isn't necessarily a great Animal Collective record in there.

It's a fascinating time to look back on now that they've come out of the other side.
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Post Posted:

Going into Centipede Hz after Tomboy and Down There, I'm having a great time seeing what each member is bringing to the table. While I personally love the record, I still have some major issues with it. Of course, everyone doing their own backing vocals is slightly upsetting. I'm not sure if it was because of changing lyrics or ease, but the only songs that I can really for sure hear Avey and Panda together on are the verses of Moonjock and bridge of Today's Supernatural (+maybe Amanita?).

The other big problem to me is the mastering. I like the alien radio concept/production, mixing, and sound choices, but the whole record sounds so muddy. Super frustrating, hopefully we'll get a remaster that clears it up one day. Feeling incredibly grateful that Time Skiffs sounds so good.

Anyways, it still has a few of my all time favorite ac songs: Today's Supernatural and New Town Burnout. Plus the b-sides are ace.

edit: this was also the most i've enjoyed Pulleys. The song isn't great, but the drums are on another level
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dio



Joined: Sun Jun 23, 2013 10:04 pm
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Post Posted:

I know we have limited adjectives for describing CHZ's controversial production/mixing, but I've never got "muddy" from it. Actually really clear to me... its just somehow they achieved this state of confusion where I can't differentiate non-drum instruments well at all on this (which, okay that does kinda sound like me describing a muddy mix)

but I think its admirable in a way... its like their instrument set-up on this record is their most traditional at that point (kiiiiinda, feels/sj is close to a "rock band" vibe) and yet you never get the sense your hearing humans play instruments, or at least I dont

everything Avey and Deakin do especially is just one big indistinguishable surge of sounds. I literally dont know what Avey's keyboards ever sound like on this even tho I can tell its almost always there.

and I think that fits in with the radio-ness vibe... music on the radio esp around then and for most of the decade definitely wansnt about distinguishable instruments.

hearing the opening of Prester where the bass and deak's keys are just hanging out, intro-ing us slowly is sooooo sweet because of how its so different than the ethos of CHZ

meanwhile Gotham, not even on the record is the closest that era got to like, easily distinguishable, separated instrumental parts.

its def a weird one, but I actually love the sound of it mostly. Some of the writing feels a lil weaker is my only thing.
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dio



Joined: Sun Jun 23, 2013 10:04 pm
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Post Posted:

do people think Water Curses is muddy? that song is a complete burrito of sound, but maybe its just too damn hooky and fun for people to not just LOVE that its such a busy track. Pretty CHZ-y sounding to me tho
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Post Posted:

Water curses doesn’t sound muddy to me at all. Sonic perfection, every instrument has a place to me. A lot going on for sure but blends much better.

It’s just when I listen to Chz on nice headphones it sounds like a 64 kB recording at times. Maybe muddy wasn’t the best word, but it’s almost def a mastering issue. Weird cause, like you said, Gotham (and Honeycomb) sound amazing
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Angelic Chaos


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Post Posted:

Sometimes I don't get the hate for CHz mix at all. I think it sounds fairly saturated and crispy, maybe lacking some really high trebles, but muddy? People love the Day with the Homies vinyl mix, right? That is like mud city! I don't know, the sounds have always been fairly separate-able for me. I like the cacophony, the squealing radio frequencies, the moments of low bitrate samples (which honestly happen on nearly every AC album). The album to me always felt intentionally schizophonic, like it's partially about all the ways we hear music around us in our daily life, so it isn't supposed to sound like a crystal clear hallucination like MPP or stark and controlled like SJ. I'm probably totally biased because I have ADHD, but the sound of CHz has always felt very relatable and exciting to me. I do get the criticisms people have about some aspects of the songwriting though. Was the first time the songs felt so structurally repetitive, and lyrically there wasn't a moment that felt almost spiritual, which I get from most of the early albums. Still love the album after all these years and think Applesauce is one of their coolest songs ever. It's like a return to the complexity of song structures on Spirits but with the pop sensibility of the rest of the album.
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dio



Joined: Sun Jun 23, 2013 10:04 pm
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Post Posted:

Angelic Chaos wrote:
Was the first time the songs felt so structurally repetitive, and lyrically there wasn't a moment that felt almost spiritual, which I get from most of the early albums. .

they're not supposed to be too repetitive! part of the concept was these weird twisty structures, which is a pretty consistent through-line in the record... Applesauce comes the closes to typical structure except it has like 4 verse which all repeat. I love Applesauce but did that "If a farmer makes a good thing" part need to happen twice?

Ok but also, I DO agree with what peoples issue might be with the songwriting/vibes is it does feel a lil less "spiritual" than earlier stuff...

SJ had less fo that really soulful, ambient leaning meditative shit, but it was "soulful" in a different way via the moodiness of FWX or the drama of Cuckoo.

MPP seems sonically spiritual honestly, tho the vibes stay kinda light.

But then CHZ really was about rocking out... and the 2 most emotional songs arguably, Gotham and Crimson don't show up at all.

but ya I agree with a lot of what yr saying... mix often sounds fucking awesome on my ears and geo's sample work is ace as hell. Something about the mix does sound like... *squeezed* together or something... and I like to think that was their aim? Weird to read about how there was some dissatisfaction with the recording from the band, like they wanted to record it live but weren't quite able to.

they just need to do like the best 4/5 songs on the album again in Time Skiffs style to show us how different it would or wouldn't be
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roopn
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Post Posted:

Stan wrote:
Spoiler: show
CHz - I loved the build up to this with the weekly broadcasts and Centipede Radio mixes. The record itself wasn't anticipated here with anything like the excitement and joy of MPP because we knew the songs weren't as good, but we got in the spirit. I was in Rome with my wife for our first holiday when we'd just started courting and I paid about seventy quid for roaming data to stream the Centipede Radio album playthrough while sitting in the bathroom in the middle of the night so I didn't wake her up.

Moonjock was a fun opener, reminded me of 90s altrock. Applesauce was great, so catchy! Take This Weight was fantastic, loved the new middle section. Pulleys was decent. Amanita outro sounded like, err, Coldplay. Everything else sounded as I'd remembered from the boots. By the time I'd got back from my hols, I felt like they were pushing themselves to keep moving in another direction but lacking the inspiration to find something as good as before. I totally respect that they didn't just make MPP2 and ride the tidal wave they'd created but this record fell short of everything they'd previously released.

Coming off MPP and his post-PP purple patch, Noah's songs here speak for themselves - a Tomboy offcut (albeit one I really like) and Rosie Oh, a song he himself thought was 'shit'. It's not the quality or quantity of his contributions to this record which are notable to me, it's his own perception of his involvement. Having driven MPP with arguably the best songs of his career, these were - to him - a couple of also-rans. Why did he feel so little investment? Tomboy was obviously an incredibly draining record, both in terms of the emotional investment of writing, performing and recording, plus the physical toll of touring, and the weight of expectations after PP and MPP. I completely understand and sympathise that he had little left in the tank and I wouldn't want him to be any more burned out than he was. Nevertheless, it's hard to argue that his presence, profile and songwriting aren't missed on CHz.

So it's Dave's record, then. That's nothing especially new. Some of their greatest albums are 'Dave's records', to use that phrasing. As band leader, did he make the record he wanted to, in that case? We've talked plenty in the past about the desert rock/alien radio concepts and whether the songwriting and tracklisting satisfied this brief, I won't dredge that up. I'll just say that it's always struck me as significant that Dave had another crack at it with Slasher Flicks before he was ready to move on. There's a killer 90s altrock album somewhere within the CHz and SF eras, but there isn't necessarily a great Animal Collective record in there.

It's a fascinating time to look back on now that they've come out of the other side.

really interesting take stan, especially in contrast to your usual brand of hyperbole, as entertaining as that is ;) . I'm curious about what you're saying about noah's own perception of the era, can you point to any interviews where he talks about that?
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dio



Joined: Sun Jun 23, 2013 10:04 pm
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Post Posted:

ya does he actually say Rosie Oh is "shit" anywhere? lol

I will say, I like literally all of us, read way too much into panda lyrics and also the like context of things and felt he was kind of out of it on CHZ.

And before you write me off, let me take u down my rabbit hole of intuitive speculation:

-I Think I Can, garbage-y sore thumb on FBK that's only fun the first 2-3 times (excuse the stan-esque hyperbole, I just liked the solo live version so much more) is literally about not knowing how to move on and not wanting to stay with the same vibes

-I feel like CHZ era (and maybe tomboy too?) was about him making sure his legacy wasn't ENTIRELY about this kind of white-tropicalia vibe that he does to an incredible level on like Chores, half of PP and Brother Sport.

-And so he was doing a lot of moody shit while trying to steer away from the usual Lion King-ish, "tropicalia" or Beach Boys-y reference points and thus..... some of TB and New Town Burnout and sort of Rosie Oh all give us different flavors beyond his Chores-y/Bro Sport-y party vibe

I think both NTB and Rosie Oh are about as awkward as Wide Eyed. No further questions at this time, and no hate but um. Yeah if CHZ was dave's record, it should have maybe been even more his record.

I dont think we ever talk about this and it almost sounds toxic... but sometimes I wonder if its been a little tricky for Dave to balance this whole thing where he's kind of the OG ringleader, head songwriter while also kind of more and more sharing that duty with Noah and recently Josh.

Idk... that gets too personal... but I could see around SJ era he was like oh shit we gotta get Noah writing more, and omg PP is incredible, and then before you know it MPP is literally 50/50 and has panda-lead singles.

obviously its largely been a huge success to have a band with multiple full realized writers and singers. That's gotta be the dream for most bands... but getting from a front-man model to that mode might b tricky

eh idk thats a tangent but ummmmmm

love typing posts about this band!!!!!!
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destiny


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Post Posted:

Angelic Chaos wrote:
Sometimes I don't get the hate for CHz mix at all. I think it sounds fairly saturated and crispy, maybe lacking some really high trebles, but muddy? People love the Day with the Homies vinyl mix, right? .

I think it works wonders with Homies cause theres not much happening vs Chz, which isn't muddy but feels more heavily packed in and blown out. Homies is like drums, bass, sample/synth line and then vocals and Chz got so much going on I could see it being a lot for people. I need to listen to Chz like 3 more times or 5...And some live shows hehe... I love AC
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captainlunatic



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Post Posted:

okay... whew... deep breath... centipede hz

the difficult one

merriweather felt like the crest of a beautiful wave. my life was looking up like at no other time then. i had a girlfriend who loved ac. i was working a great job with a lot of cool people. things had basically reached the peak, or so i thought. over the course of the next three years, though, my mental health started to drastically decline, and i began to push away the important ones. i felt unfixable. i couldn't stop hurting people with my words. and right along with that was the sense that ac had hit a wall. my favorite band had stopped releasing music at a breakneck pace. where were they? how was i supposed to get through these tough times without that feeling that i was on the up-and-up along with them? i stopped listening to even their old music because it didn't hit the same way anymore, and clearly that meant i was just over them instead of the obvious, that i just needed to chill out. but my brain wasn't capable of doing that, so it put all of those problems on the people who meant the most to me. honeycomb/gotham and centipede hz seemed to confirm all of my suspicions with a big old ugly exclamation point: animal collective was over. my ability to love was over. the dark times had come, and they weren't going to go away for a long time. that, ultimately, is what the album represents to me: everything coming crashing down in an unholy mess, and finding a way to pick up the pieces and rebuild despite all of the obstacles that lay ahead. since then, centipede hz has grown on me quite a bit in terms of both the production and songwriting; they clearly were doing something different, even though it wasn't quite as obviously different as what i was used to at the time. and painting with was a huge breath of fresh air for me when it dropped, so i knew fairly quickly that my suspicions about the band being over were unwarranted. but it's hard to shake that feeling of something being wrong when i listen to centipede hz today, and for that reason i just don't put it on much. why make myself sad?

for tomboy, i will say that that album never truly clicked for me until i listened to it on acid just the other month. i really think noah made it specifically for that kind of experience, in terms of the sounds he used on it. i don't know about anyone else, but i always get very oceany, wavey vibes in my head on lsd, like i'm being transported to some watery, beachy source where it all began. i felt that the first time i did it with no music, and when i put on tomboy the next time it was like, holy shit. this is the soundtrack i've been looking for. amazing album that i thought was a disappointment when it was released (though not as much as i thought centipede hz was... maybe i should listen to that one on drugs too?) all of sonic boom's contributions have aged very, very well, from the weird synth line on the title track to just the little ways he beefed up the production on the singles. and benfica is just a beautiful closer. i totally get why panda thinks it's his best, though person pitch still edges it out
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foxtrot
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Post Posted:

So much to catch up on here:
captainlunatic wrote:
Excellent write-up on MPP. I think more than anything I love how good that album makes me feel. There aren't a whole lot of reasons to be optimistic anymore, but when I listen to MPP I think everything might actually work out beautifully and happily and wonderfully. It's such an amazing sonic world to visit, and I'm very thankful it exists

Thanks mate! More thoughts further down. I was really moved by your reflections on MPP/CHz. So glad MPP can still make you feel that way. It has a similar effect on me.
nothingmaster wrote:
blasted merriweather on my turntable and man it really is a miracle of production. they pushed the sound to this absurd size, yet it sounds so warm and organic. the samples are particularly masterfully applied, in how they instantly create this evocative world for the rest of the sonics to blend with.

It has to be the most sonically pleasing album of all time. The definition of 'ear-candy'.
blindmowing wrote:
MPP
because the mixing on this record is such a fucking mind trip it's so fascinating to listen to this album for all of the LAYERS...every listen can be a vastly different experience depending on what you focus on

the background effects on this thing are wild... give this a listen some time to ONLY listen to the random effects going on in the background if you haven't...it'll blow your mind

my most recent listen focused on Panda's drums. i'm sure there's some drum machine in there, but there is also A LOT of Panda drumming, and he spends a lot of it playing on the rims...

So true. I think I've probably heard this album over 200 times and still pick up on things I've never heard before.

blindmowing wrote:
there's an incredible detail i'd always missed on "Taste." the muddy kick drum (?) is constantly lagging and OFF BEAT. it's so disorientating and hypnotizing if you get locked in on it, because it goes without fail a microsecond off, then a microsecond back on beat, and keeps looping this off/on beat thing and it's a super small detail that will absolutely make the song for me every time i listen now

YES!!!! This is amazing. So hypnotising and such a brilliant little twist. Perfect example of this album's genius!
blindmowing wrote:
said this not too long ago, but the first 15 seconds of "Also Frightened" is peak AC

I don't think anyone here would disagree that the intro and outro of 'Also Frightened' are absolute peak AC. The whole song is really.

dio - yeh, I love how the studio versions have so much subtle live drumming going on. The programmed beats often take centre stage but Panda is jamming along most of the time with his usual brilliant flourishes.
Slippi's Applesauce wrote:
Finally listened to Down There. Always have liked this album a lot and never understood the muted reaction/vitriol around release. The first two songs have Avey at his most emotional and then his most melodic, a perfect contrast between the two. Oliver Twist may go a little overboard on vocal effects to some, but the song is great once you get to know it. What a melody!

I bloody love this album. I think it sometimes gets that lukewarm reaction because it is so understated compared to what people thought of as 'the Avey Tare sound'. At this stage people were expecting bangers like Fireworks and Summertime Clothes. Down There is a whole different thing. Also, the melody of Oliver Twist is genius. Especially the whole 'maybe the thing I need is the thing I've got' section. The effects just enhance it for me.
Slippi's Applesauce wrote:
The piano at the end of glass bottom boat is amazing.

I always imagine this section as like the closing moments of a tour of the swamp where the tour guide is thanking the guests and the boat is gently pulling into shore.
Slippi's Applesauce wrote:
Cemeteries feels like slowly canoeing at night past a… well, cemetery.

Yes! I always picture the scene that Screens accompanies in ODDSAC. Weird vampire Deeks slowly paddling in the dead of night.
Slippi's Applesauce wrote:
Love the swampy theme running throughout it. I’ve lived in Florida most of my life and it reminds me of taking kayaks or glass bottom boats (lol) and looking for alligators. Obviously there’s a lot more going on emotionally here in terms of relationships ending, but to me it’s a wonderous, swampy experience that brings me back to my childhood

I think you and I see this album in a very similar way.
roopn wrote:
Foxtrot: awesome write up on MPP. What a special moment for your first listen. I love that after so long the album still makes you so giddy. I'm curious, did you share the album with your wife, or is she ambivalent to AC?

Yeh we totally shared it! She is nowhere near as obsessive as me but she loves this album. She varies a bit of other AC releases (has to be the right setting/context) but she loves MPP. One other little story I didn't share in my massive MPP rant was that right at the end of our time in Japan we saw AC live at the Fuji Rock Festival. It was an absolute peak moment of my life. During My Girls we held each other and I cried. It was such an overwhelming moment. The culmination of probably the happiest year of my life. They closed the set with Fireworks and Bro Sport and I danced like a freak. This memory is up there with the birth of my first child as far as amazing memories go.
madameghostly wrote:
Centipede Hz: as someone who used to not think much of this album, how do people not like this album? well, i mean, i know how, demoitis is a hell of a thing, and even aside from that, 2010s AC seems to be the decade's worth of music everyone loves to hate, but still, HOW?!

Let me reiterate: I love this album! But there is a difference between an album I love (of which there are thousands) and an album that moves me and connects deeply with me in a profound way. CHz just never quite did that. Not like the previous 5.
madameghostly wrote:
i've come to love just about every song on here, with MAYBE the exception of Father Time and Mercury Man (yes, i'm a Pulleys enjoyer, completely disregard my opinions accordingly) and my favorites continue to be Wide Eyed and Monkey Riches

Mercury Man deserves your immediate re-evaluation.
scrambledgreggs wrote:
the CHz b-sides were so much more special to me than the album, I must have listened to each of them more than any album track when they first came out. when the Honeycomb/Gotham single surprise dropped I had randomly decided to do a juice fast for a day and then smoke a ton of weed so I remember the raw/voracious sound of them perfectly matched the rumbling hunger I was feeling in my stomach. but also honestly Honeycomb's harmonies were a perfect segue from the MPP to Centipede sound, with the "all the impossible places you'll go in your liiiiife LIIIFE LIIIIFE" part at the end really taking off in a way that a lot of the best moments of MPP did. but it also signaled the start of something new which was very exciting at the time as well

Honeycomb was always my favourite of the boots. I was mortified that it didn't make the cut.
scrambledgreggs wrote:
Gotham was also incredible, it kind of reminds me of Street Flash in terms of the garbled samples and abstract textures. so much attention to detail in that song as with most things the band has done. also loved that line about the ficus. and then Crimson, CHz's missing ballad moment, came as a bonus after I had already exhaustively played out the album tracks and was still craving more AC, so I put it on loop for basically a whole day and it really delivered

Like I said in my little write up: it would have felt like a very different album with these three subbed in for a few of the studio only tracks.
scrambledgreggs wrote:
I don't get the sense that people hate on CHz around here, I think most agree it is a solid album, but for me and I think many others it was the first in a long run of AC albums that didn't inspire that "OMG THIS IS THE BEST THING THEY'VE EVER DONE" feeling so I think it's only natural for people who had been following the band for awhile to feel a little bit let down.

This is pretty much it. I still love it. But it was the first new album in 9 years that I didn't think topped what came before it in some way.
Stan wrote:
CHz - I loved the build up to this with the weekly broadcasts and Centipede Radio mixes. The record itself wasn't anticipated here with anything like the excitement and joy of MPP because we knew the songs weren't as good, but we got in the spirit. I was in Rome with my wife for our first holiday when we'd just started courting and I paid about seventy quid for roaming data to stream the Centipede Radio album playthrough while sitting in the bathroom in the middle of the night so I didn't wake her up.

Ha! Love this! What a way to do your first listen!
Stan wrote:
Coming off MPP and his post-PP purple patch, Noah's songs here speak for themselves - a Tomboy offcut (albeit one I really like) and Rosie Oh, a song he himself thought was 'shit'. It's not the quality or quantity of his contributions to this record which are notable to me, it's his own perception of his involvement. Having driven MPP with arguably the best songs of his career, these were - to him - a couple of also-rans. Why did he feel so little investment? Tomboy was obviously an incredibly draining record, both in terms of the emotional investment of writing, performing and recording, plus the physical toll of touring, and the weight of expectations after PP and MPP. I completely understand and sympathise that he had little left in the tank and I wouldn't want him to be any more burned out than he was. Nevertheless, it's hard to argue that his presence, profile and songwriting are missed on CHz.

Not sure about all of this. I always had the impression that it was more about him seeking something that felt fresh/different. After a pretty intense song writing period I'm pretty sure I remember him basically saying that he just wanted to play drums for a while. I get that.
Stan wrote:
So it's Dave's record, then. That's nothing especially new. Some of their greatest albums are 'Dave's records', to use that phrasing. As band leader, did he make the record he wanted to, in that case? We've talked plenty in the past about the desert rock/alien radio concepts and whether the songwriting and tracklisting satisfied this brief, I won't dredge that up. I'll just say that it's always struck me as significant that Dave had another crack at it with Slasher Flicks before he was ready to move on. There's a killer 90s altrock album somewhere within the CHz and SF eras, but there isn't necessarily a great Animal Collective record in there.

It's a fascinating time to look back on now that they've come out of the other side.

I think Slasher Flicks has its own distinct character. I have no idea how staisfied he was with how those albums turned out but there is definitely a lot to enjoy for me as a listener. Someone later on mentions the 'spiritual' element and I do see that as potnetially being the missing ingredient during this period. There is a certain mystical/magical element to his best work that he really seems to capture on CHz or Slasher Flicks. Still a bunch of ripper songs in here though!
Slippi's Applesauce wrote:
Going into Centipede Hz after Tomboy and Down There, I'm having a great time seeing what each member is bringing to the table. While I personally love the record, I still have some major issues with it. Of course, everyone doing their own backing vocals is slightly upsetting. I'm not sure if it was because of changing lyrics or ease, but the only songs that I can really for sure hear Avey and Panda together on are the verses of Moonjock and bridge of Today's Supernatural (+maybe Amanita?).

I've always just taken this as them trying new things every album. Like, what will it come out like if we try it this way this time around?
Slippi's Applesauce wrote:
I like the alien radio concept/production, mixing, and sound choices, but the whole record sounds so muddy. Super frustrating, hopefully we'll get a remaster that clears it up one day. Feeling incredibly grateful that Time Skiffs sounds so good.

People often use the word 'cluttered' and I agree that its a good fit. I think everything can be made out but there is so much going on and often all the action seems like its happening independently. Like there is a certain synchronicity that's not quite there. Which might be completely intentional, that's just how I hear it.
dio wrote:
you never get the sense your hearing humans play instruments, or at least I dont

So maybe it IS intentional! Maybe its all part of the alien concept. Deliberately making it sound less 'human' than their ultra-human (tribal, primal, whatever your preferred adjective is) past.
Angelic Chaos wrote:
The album to me always felt intentionally schizophonic, like it's partially about all the ways we hear music around us in our daily life, so it isn't supposed to sound like a crystal clear hallucination like MPP or stark and controlled like SJ. I'm probably totally biased because I have ADHD, but the sound of CHz has always felt very relatable and exciting to me.

I like this take. CHz as a deliberately schizophonic expression of the chaotic musical saturation of engaging in modern society. Hearing snippets of different songs bleeding into a cacophonous mass
every time you walk through a shopping mall or something. And imagining how visitors (extra-terrestrials) might perceive that as how we actually experience 'music'.
dio wrote:
I DO agree with what peoples issue might be with the songwriting/vibes is it does feel a lil less "spiritual" than earlier stuff...

SJ had less fo that really soulful, ambient leaning meditative shit, but it was "soulful" in a different way via the moodiness of FWX or the drama of Cuckoo.

MPP seems sonically spiritual honestly, tho the vibes stay kinda light.

But then CHZ really was about rocking out... and the 2 most emotional songs arguably, Gotham and Crimson don't show up at all.

Yeh, here it is. Agree wholeheartedly. I think NTB is probably the only track that really gets me in that classic spiritual/emotional AC way. Maybe Wide Eyed too. Thought that also hit different because it was a Deakin track and his sound wasn't really a part of the AC universe at that time.
dio wrote:
I Think I Can, garbage-y sore thumb on FBK that's only fun the first 2-3 times (excuse the stan-esque hyperbole, I just liked the solo live version so much more) is literally about not knowing how to move on and not wanting to stay with the same vibes

Hard disgree! One of his best and most inspired sounding tracks ever for me.
dio wrote:
I feel like CHZ era (and maybe tomboy too?) was about him making sure his legacy wasn't ENTIRELY about this kind of white-tropicalia vibe that he does to an incredible level on like Chores, half of PP and Brother Sport.

-And so he was doing a lot of moody shit while trying to steer away from the usual Lion King-ish, "tropicalia" or Beach Boys-y reference points and thus..... some of TB and New Town Burnout and sort of Rosie Oh all give us different flavors beyond his Chores-y/Bro Sport-y party vibe

Mostly agree here though. I also think him getting back on the kit ties in with this. Possibly trying to show that he has multiple sides or whatever.
dio wrote:
I dont think we ever talk about this and it almost sounds toxic... but sometimes I wonder if its been a little tricky for Dave to balance this whole thing where he's kind of the OG ringleader, head songwriter while also kind of more and more sharing that duty with Noah and recently Josh.

Idk... that gets too personal... but I could see around SJ era he was like oh shit we gotta get Noah writing more, and omg PP is incredible, and then before you know it MPP is literally 50/50 and has panda-lead singles.

obviously its largely been a huge success to have a band with multiple full realized writers and singers. That's gotta be the dream for most bands... but getting from a front-man model to that mode might b tricky

eh idk thats a tangent but ummmmmm

No, I don't think that's really the AC way. I can't imagine Dave really worrying about it. They've always been about friendship and collaboration and freedom of participation etc. Also, Noah had tracks from the start really (Bad Crumbs for example). He and Noah totally shared the duties on Sung Tongs too. So as early as 2004 (only two years after their first proper album) things were shared around a lot.
captainlunatic wrote:
merriweather felt like the crest of a beautiful wave. my life was looking up like at no other time then. i had a girlfriend who loved ac. i was working a great job with a lot of cool people. things had basically reached the peak, or so i thought. over the course of the next three years, though, my mental health started to drastically decline, and i began to push away the important ones. i felt unfixable. i couldn't stop hurting people with my words. and right along with that was the sense that ac had hit a wall. my favorite band had stopped releasing music at a breakneck pace. where were they? how was i supposed to get through these tough times without that feeling that i was on the up-and-up along with them? i stopped listening to even their old music because it didn't hit the same way anymore, and clearly that meant i was just over them instead of the obvious, that i just needed to chill out. but my brain wasn't capable of doing that, so it put all of those problems on the people who meant the most to me. honeycomb/gotham and centipede hz seemed to confirm all of my suspicions with a big old ugly exclamation point: animal collective was over. my ability to love was over. the dark times had come, and they weren't going to go away for a long time. that, ultimately, is what the album represents to me: everything coming crashing down in an unholy mess, and finding a way to pick up the pieces and rebuild despite all of the obstacles that lay ahead. since then, centipede hz has grown on me quite a bit in terms of both the production and songwriting; they clearly were doing something different, even though it wasn't quite as obviously different as what i was used to at the time. and painting with was a huge breath of fresh air for me when it dropped, so i knew fairly quickly that my suspicions about the band being over were unwarranted. but it's hard to shake that feeling of something being wrong when i listen to centipede hz today, and for that reason i just don't put it on much. why make myself sad

I was really moved by this captain. I think I too have pinned my journey through life to this band in a lot of ways so reading that really connected. I hoped you're able to find ways to be kind to yourself and maybe rediscover this album in a fresh context. Divorce it from your past and find it anew.
captainlunatic wrote:
for tomboy, i will say that that album never truly clicked for me until i listened to it on acid just the other month. i really think noah made it specifically for that kind of experience, in terms of the sounds he used on it. i don't know about anyone else, but i always get very oceany, wavey vibes in my head on lsd, like i'm being transported to some watery, beachy source where it all began. i felt that the first time i did it with no music, and when i put on tomboy the next time it was like, holy shit. this is the soundtrack i've been looking for. amazing album that i thought was a disappointment when it was released (though not as much as i thought centipede hz was... maybe i should listen to that one on drugs too?) all of sonic boom's contributions have aged very, very well, from the weird synth line on the title track to just the little ways he beefed up the production on the singles. and benfica is just a beautiful closer. i totally get why panda thinks it's his best, though person pitch still edges it out

Most of my early listens to Tomboy were stoned and it was just such great music for that headspace. The cavernous, dubby, beach at night kinda vibe was perfect for being lightly stoned, at home alone with my cat. I was studying and my wife was working full time so I'd spend a lot of time at home blasting Tomboy.

I think the harsher production works really well on Tomboy. I always imagine the album taking place in a big ocean cave. Salt water and darkness and that huge sense of space (part comforting part intimidating).

I love the way the harsh beats sit behind the 50s/60s inspired numbers like on Last Night at the Jetty and Surfer's Hymn. The massive hip hop beat on Slow Motion is amazing and begging to be sampled. I bloody love that song. Benfica is the greatest song about a soccer I have ever heard. It actually sounds like some kind of parallel universe football crowd chant.
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Stan


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Post Posted:

roopn wrote:
really interesting take stan, especially in contrast to your usual brand of hyperbole, as entertaining as that is ;) . I'm curious about what you're saying about noah's own perception of the era, can you point to any interviews where he talks about that?

I have just looked for it but I can't find the quote, I'm afraid. It stuck with me, though. The context was talking about the songs (maybe going through every song on the album) and he said that the others had to convince him to put it on the album because he thought it was "shit". Josh alludes to it in an AUX interview in a typically kind and understated Josh way, according to Songfacts: https://www.songfacts.com/facts/animal- ... e/rosie-oh
wrote:
According to Animal Collective multi-instrumentalist Josh "Deakin" Dibb's track-by-track interview with AUX Magazine, the band took a lot of convincing to include this on Centipede Hz, especially Panda Bear, "who saw it as a side note or something." Eventually they became "really attached to it."

In terms of Noah's perception of the era, I'm coming to my own conclusions based on the songs he contributed. He wrote a third of SJ, about half of MPP and less than a fifth of CHz, comprising one song which didn't make his solo record and something he considered a side note/shit. I don't think it's a big leap to conclude that he didn't feel as invested in the desert rock direction - at least as a songwriter. As I say, I don't think it's the main reason why this record is weaker, it's nothing new to have Dave at the fore, but Noah's emotive and melodic sensibilities are missed.

I did stumble upon a really insightful and open Stereogum interview while looking for Noah's shit quote:

https://www.stereogum.com/1137341/anima ... nterviews/


Several things stand out for me:

i) They made a conscious decision to have a more aggressive live sound after MPP touring became a bit too laidback.

ii) Noah describes the songwriting/jamming process as 'workmanlike'.

iii) They recorded hours and hours of music and realised they 'needed more actual songs'.

iv) They worked this way for three months but the songs didn't really come together until the last couple of weeks.

v) Brian says, "We didn’t want to just play all new songs at the shows...we wanted to put together a fun set that would connect with everyone..." RIP Animal Collective of 2001-2011.

vi) Best New Allen III overreaches and fails:

"Ben Allen got in touch with us. He’d seen us play some of the new songs at a show in Atlanta and then wrote us an email about how he had this idea to record a band in a studio environment but to record them as if they were playing a show."

So was the record actually recorded that way?

[Everyone laughs]

"No."

...

"Ben finally had to say, look, we can’t make a good record this way."

NICE ONE BEN MATE

vii) Despite his failure to fulfil the brief, they hand over all mixing duties to him like on MPP. Josh is a bit perturbed by this.

"Brian: With the four of us in a room trying to mix a record, we could mix and remix the same song for days and days. More of this, less of this, oh no, but more of this sound …. Now we can feel OK to just leave for a while and let Ben do his thing...

Noah: We got used to that on Merriweather...

Josh: On every previous Animal Collective record I would sit in the studio from the moment we walked in and turned on the lights until the moment we were done, I was involved in every part of it...So when we first went in to do the mixing, it was a little jarring for me that we weren’t all gonna sit there and listen through the entire process."

No surprise that MPP and CHz sound like blubber compared to all their other records. :v

viii) They were able to occupy themselves while B3nny Ctrl+V his Gnarls Barkley presets.

"Weitz: Luckily, there was a ping-pong table nearby."

This quote epitomises CHz for me.
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ODDSAC

I’ve watched ODDSAC a bunch of times over the years but I’ve very rarely listened without viewing. Absolutely, watching and listening (as intended) is the best way to experience it but since this whole thing is about revisiting the band’s music I thought it’d be interesting to give this album a listen only run through. Try to really focus in on the sonic elements and maybe pick up on some things that I had missed as a consequence of focussing on the visuals.

Mr Fingers works so well as the opener here. As with a lot of this album’s best tracks, I almost wish it had appeared on a ‘regular’ AC album so that more people listened and talked about its brilliance. This is top tier AC. A masterful song. It contains so much of what I love about the band. When writing this I actually finished the song and went straight back to the start and listened all over again because I wanted to soak it in some more. The gorgeously moody synths at the start. The slightly unsettling pitch shifted vocals. So close to Avey yet so clearly not quite him and not. quite. right. I love all the voice samples swimming in and out. This song could survive on just this first section and be one of those great, slightly creepy ambient AC tracks. When the change comes I love the way its all weird synths and that new vocal melody. Random percussive sounds bounce around and then BAH BOOM. BOOM. The drums are fucking epic on this song. HUGE. And then they just disappear, and this warped bridge section swings in. I love it. Compositional genius. When the drums and vocals come back things suddenly lock into a real sense of movement. A big, lush AC sound filled with layered vocal bits, big rhythms and crazy electronics.

Kindle Song has the most sinister beat/backing track. Like death is about to wrap its fingers around your throat. Avey sounds resigned to the coming threat. Panda and Deakin try to buoy him with their backing vocals (which are awesome by the way) but the insane electronic mayhem overcomes all of them. So simple but always such an entertaining track.

Satin Orb Wash is where things start to rely on the visuals a bit more. That said, there is plenty going on and the sounds are always changing and often frightening in their sudden appearance and disappearance. I do love the dynamics here. And that main warbled grunting/panting sound that frequently reoccurs is so fucking weird and disconcerting.

The main loop of Green Beans is incredibly beautiful. It could have been some kind of Loch Raven level piece of bliss. As it is, I love the breather that it provides. It lulls you into this wonderfully hallucinatory false sense of security for a minute.

SIDE NOTE: As I’m listening, I have to say, it is almost impossible at this point to not imagine the accompanying visuals. That said, I do think this is worth it. I’m really giving 100% to nothing but the sounds and it’s a lot of fun.

Screens: top 5 Panda track? Holy shit I love this song. It is breathtaking. I dream of a whole Panda acoustic album that captures the sense of mournful serenity that this song so perfectly nails. It is devastatingly beautiful. Loved really homing in on the synths, high droplets of electronic wonder and delicate water sounds in the background this time around. The looping ‘why am I seeing screens?’ section is quintessential Panda. I know I’m just focussing on the music this time around but this is one of my favourite moments in the film too. Vampire Deeks is a total ODDSAC highlight every time he pops up but especially here.

Urban Crème is longer than it needs to be. It’s the one part of the album that doesn’t captivate me the whole way through. Both sonically and visually. This is the get up to pee and grab another beer part of the film really. The bass is thick as fuck and good fun for some playful ear torture. The main loop is cool. I think the drone that accompanies it could have more power though. Something to really suck you into the void a bit more. The chirpy animal noises that Geo presumably throws in are fun. The intermittent circus organ bit feels a bit misplaced to me. This track could have worked really well at about half the length it is. Either that or build to some drums towards the end. Even just some random tom hits with a bit of reverb.

Working very much gets things back on track. Like Sung Tongs being stabbed in the face by the ghost of Dead Drunk era Terrestrial Tones. One of Avey’s most tender little melodies. I love how just as they introduce Panda’s sweet, buoyant backing vocals they then almost immediately introduce the noise blasts. Such a surprising and thrilling choice. So much fun to listen to/watch.

Tantrum Barb thrives on its simplicity. I love how pure and straight forward and driving this track is. The perfect mid album/film banger. Huge drums and a super melodic and infectious Panda Bear vocal. All the laser beam synth stuff is awesome too. Bloody love this one. One of the benefits of the format of ODDSAC is that every track has stayed really fresh over the years because I just don’t get the chance to listen nearly as often as most of their other stuff.

After the relative lightness of the last couple of tracks Lady on the Lake is so amazingly creepy. From that very first menacing snarl sample. And the way the entire vocal is panted/whispered like someone hiding in a cupboard waiting for the monster to open the door at any moment. It is absolutely chilling. I think it’s probably the best they’ve ever done at conveying the pure feeling of fear. The kind of agitation and terror and weakness and vulnerability.

I dig the way Fried Camp builds towards its climax. The ‘marshmallow time!’ bit at the start is great. This track works really well in the film. One of my favourite sections. The whole marshmallow bit and the Vampire Deek attack! Musically, I find it really engaging the way the tension just builds and builds. When the beat come in its really trancey and hypnotic yet there is still all this terrifying sonic chaos happening all around it. Absolutely love the huge, sustained note they sing at the end.

Fried Vamp is more about the film for me. RIP Monster Josh! The music works well enough in context but doesn’t do a lot on its own. Which is all good. It wasn’t intended to.

Mess Hour House is such a cute/creepy contrast. It switches sides constantly. This strange clash is what makes it work. Cute one moment, scary the next, then beautiful, then alarming etc etc. Really dig the way the last little bit builds into the screams that usher in What Happened?

Another killer track that deserves much wider exposure. Absolutely love the layers of percussion on this song: the drums, tambourine, and that electronic rattling sound. The melody is fantastic and Avey brings his trademark intensity. What Happened? works so well as a closer with that big closing chorus/refrain. And just that repeated line... Like, what the fuck did I just witness?!

Apart from Urban Creme and Fried Vamp this works as a stand-alone album for me. And a bloody good one. Love the totally unique vibe of this album and really enjoyed the audio only experience this time around.



Keep Cassette:
Listened to this for the first time in ages today. It is pretty much as I remembered. Geo track is cool but a little uneventful (compared to something like Baleen). Avey track feels a bit half finished which makes sense considering the release. Preakness sounds nice in this version (how it started) so I dig that we have that. And then...

DEAKIN WASTED ONE OF HIS BEST SONGS AND THE MOMENT HE FINALLY REVEALED HIS BRILLAINCE ON THIS RANDOM CASETTE RELEASE!

Country Report is so fucking good. I remember losing my shit when this first came out. How was this guy not writing and contributing as heavily as Noah?! At the time I had no idea how long it would take him to eventually build the strength and confidence to properly share his music with us.
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Post Posted:

foxtrot wrote:
Mercury Man deserves your immediate re-evaluation.

yeah, actually, now that i'm listening to it again, i can see i was a bit quick to judge Mercury Man. i'm officially changing my stance to Mercury Man is great

anyway

Transverse Temporal Gyrus: hey, i went into this expecting it to suck and it was actually really good! i guess, for some reason, i was expecting it to be more like Wastered, which, oh yeah, i forgot to tell you guys i listened to Wastered and had literally nothing to say about it because it goes nowhere, but that's neither here nor there. no, the release i'd rather compare TTG to is Ark. really, it feels like Ark's poppier cousin and, while i wouldn't say it's better than Ark, i still love it. i love the little bits of quote-unquote actual songs scattered throughout, i love the way they seamlessly transition in and out of the haze, and i love getting more of that amazing early AC anti-Eno ambience i've come to know and love. it's just a really nice collection of sounds, and i'll definitely be revisiting it soon

Keep: hey, i went into this expecting it to be mid and it was actually... it's alright. on paper, whoever came up with the idea to make these guys do a Kiss but on a split EP should obviously be regarded as one of the greatest geniuses of our time, but in practice... i have a few notes

we start with Jailhouse, which... i mean, what is this? come on, Geo, if you're gonna give us modular synth noodling for your contribution, at least give us more than 2 minutes for the sounds to get to know each other! after that, we have Call Home (Buy Grapes), which is... alright. very par-for-the-course Avey solo stuff. no real complaints from me, except maybe the fact that it sounds like it was recorded on a flip phone, but that's just me. the second half is where things really pick up, though. i immediately fell in love with Country Report and The Preakness, both of them are just gorgeous in every way and now i'm even more excited to hear Sleep Cycle and Tomboy respectively. all in all, i guess i'd say i'm glad this EP exists, even if some tracks are a lot better than others
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Post Posted:

Thanks for the kind words, foxtrot <3 yeah, one thing we all seem to share in common here is the emotional, personal connection we have to this band, because their music is so intensely heartfelt. I'm happy to say that I'm in an unfathomably better place than I was 10 years ago. I've really chilled out and am able to just be present and think things through before acting. I can still be kind of hard on myself, but it comes from a genuine desire to improve as opposed to mere self-flagellation. I'm sure one of these days I'll put on CHZ again and really enjoy it for what it is, and not what it isn't

Well-put descriptions of Tomboy too. Yes, caverny and dubby, 100%. It's really not that much different from Person Pitch in that regard, despite the change in producers and setup. The two definitely form a continuum, along with Grim Reaper. You could almost even call them a trilogy, though it would be interesting to hear Noah's take on it (he did call Buoys a new beginning or something to that effect)
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Post Posted:

Stan wrote:

I did stumble upon a really insightful and open Stereogum interview while looking for Noah's shit quote:

https://www.stereogum.com/1137341/anima ... nterviews/

.

This is a great find, don't remember reading this when it came out. Looking back at this now and reading some of their answers it's hard not to feel like they were unsatisfied with Allen's production. They try to play it off here but Geo bringing up that he had to be like "my sounds are there for a reason" seems bad. Not something you want to have to tell the guy producing your record.
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Post Posted:

Stan wrote:
viii) They were able to occupy themselves while B3nny Ctrl+V his Gnarls Barkley presets.

"Weitz: Luckily, there was a ping-pong table nearby."

This quote epitomises CHz for me.

Maybe I misunderstood, but I think that last quote about ping pong was during MPP not chz
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Post Posted:

Ben Allen was perfect for MPP but definitely not the dude for CHz. Still love the album, though it took a while to grow on me. Need to be in kind of a specific mood/place for it. And there's absolutely no way you can say Noah was checked out in how he played his fucking brains out on the sticks. In a way that was both innovative and just balls to the wall, downright athletic. Fucker looks like he's running a marathon in those live videos. The shaker ball-thing and his ridiculous rolls are the foundation of that "centipede" frequency for me.
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Post Posted:

I didn't say he'd checked out.

For the record, I do not like the incessant triplets on a bin lid. I respect him trying something different and the junkyard drumkit is an interesting idea but like so much of the sound of CHz, it's so self-consciously 'different'. They certainly tried to get out of their comfort zone, and I appreciate that, but the end result was still 'average music'.
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Post Posted:

Yeah panda is fucking owning on that shit. He went up every other night and made Mercury and amanita look like childs play. Same with Painting with his songs look so hard to perform concisely and it extends to Aveys songs too. Burglars is an insane performance. I love thinking about the performance aspect of animal collective songs. They can be so absurdly difficult to play that its almost hilarious.

Can't say i see it being self conscious. He always doing weird shit with his drum set ups. I could see the bongos being excessive if youre being pedantic. But i can groove with it. All of my problems with it stem from how Benji mixed it. Not the way for sure. Loved that article where they talked about recording the album. And the voice effects, which seemed gratuitous, and kinda messed with Slasher flicks for me.
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Post Posted:

I am another vote for team ‘Panda just wanted to bash the fuck outta those skins’.

CHz drums fucking OWN.

I am blasting this album rn, home alone, making dinner and just rocking out.

Maybe it’s nice to have an AC album that doesn’t get me all emotional every time I hear it? Maybe it’s nice to just bounce around like an idiot for 50 minutes?
Last edited by foxtrot on Tue Jan 04, 2022 10:37 am, edited 1 time in total.
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Post Posted:

Transverse Temporal Gyrus:

Love how it opens with Oddsac levels of creepy as fuck sound collage. I see a lot of similarities between these two releases. Chopped up, chaotic, dynamic, disorienting samples and electronics interspersed with song fragments. Fleeting moments of beauty amongst the pervading sense of foreboding. The first acoustic section in part 1 is so cool. Love the frantic little strumming pattern and Avey’s melody is surprisingly strong for a piece like this. Bit of a precursor to some Eucalyptus/MoTW vibes here. The section in the middle reminds A LOT of Fried Camp. I get lots of images of stalking and lurking in shadows. The part that starts around 8:30 is so Black Dice. I really dig how demented yet playful it feels. One of those brief moments of respite before the next ominous section sweeps in. I swear the part that starts around 10 mins in is from a Panda Bear track. Can anyone tell me? As it is here, it’s this cool kind of haunted glimpse at some kind of apparition of a Panda song. The way part 1 ends is super intense with the sudden blast of noise about a minute before the end. And so finishes part 1 of AC’s Revolution No. 9.

I love the start of Part 2 with those super cool pitch shifted vocals and the alien synth stuff. The first song-ish bit here is very cool. Always reminds me of Avey’s early 2000s stuff like Wastered or Crumbling Land etc. The second songy bit is a great little Deak treat. So many of these sections are such teasers. How awesome would it be to hear them fleshed out? The part from about 8 mins to 9 mins has this rad swampy ambient vibe. Love the bass part here. Then things kinda go nowhere for a few minutes. The track gets interesting again for me when the huge stomping sound comes in and we get a little reprise of some Deakin song/vocal before things get all Satin Orb Wash and then promptly end.

A total curiosity in their catalogue but fun to occasionally revisit. Honestly though, who of us has ever given it more than about 5 listens?!
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Post Posted:

Tomboy: this is a pretty solid follow-up to Person Pitch. while it might not hit some of the high highs of Noah's magnum opus, it's still pretty consistently good. in addition to the album that may or may not overshadow this one, i found myself comparing and contrasting with Down There at times. i like that this is a lot more upbeat overall, but it's still not afraid to go to those dark places at times. the track that stood out the most to me on this first listen was Afterburner, which gives me slight The Field vibes and is just a banger in general, but there wasn't really anything here i didn't like

now all that's left for me to do this week is THE ANIMAL COLLECTIVE MOVIE
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Post Posted:

still playing catch up:

Strawberry Jam
my first favorite AC album before the Feels-ST-MPP wolf pack caught up, in which all 4 now run stride-by-side in lockstep as one four-headed sixteen-legged sonic beast of my dreams

burnt emotional mudcake lyrics. wasn't until this thread that i really appreciated how intensely soul-bearing Avey is on this one. i've always been caught by the visceral sensorium of the lyrics, but there is heart blood staining the corners of each of these songs.

this album is the ultimate Sensorium, both lyrically and musically. nine songs of varied textures, each song a layer cake, oozing creams and jellies (JAMS, duh) but also crunchy chocolates and nuts and squishy candies like sugar worms and Jujubes and marshmallow bananas. i've yet to find an album that packs as many different flavors into one album. each song a savory-sweet masterpiece of sonic baking. while many songs give you a taste, a flavor, biting into a SJ song gives your ears every sensation -- taste and texture and pleasure and overwhelm.

some of my favorite sounds on the record:
-- Panda's vocals on "Fireworks" morph into the samples of bird calls, what a Mind Trip
-- Deakin's guitar work -- the highpoint of his artistic career
-- the quacking duck sample on the noisy parts of "Cucko Cuckoo"
-- the scabbed electronics and digital railroad sample on "Fireworks"
-- bonefish ... *digitized aliens skittering like ants through space*

Tomboy

a minimal cinematic experience, angel daydreaming on a white-sand beach, psychedelic in monochrome, triangular stadium band set up. Noah's vocals blasting past the rafters into the blinding heavens. those vocals pure cocaine lacing the aisles of God's ear-drums, those synth drones carving trenches into the veins of space cadets, the reverb of guitars ricocheting off the furthest planets -- what i'm getting at is this music goes FAR OUT... it is Stadium Music in the truest since in that its reach and power feels transcendent, limitless. i'd never recognized jus how big these songs were until i just finished a listen. this is noah splayed out upon the expanse, giving us just a few sounds (the minimalism of this music and his vocals) but letting each of them be loud and overbearing

"Alsatian Darn" chord changes as hard-hitting as those on "Banshee Beat"
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Post Posted:

P casual interview but Oliver Platt interviewed PB for release of Tomboy loooool

https://nymag.com/arts/popmusic/feature ... tt-2011-5/
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Post Posted:

Damn Moonjock fucking rips. There are places where the production sounds awesome. The section from 1:23 to 1:45... fuck yes. Pump that shit into my nervous system. Immediately followed by the most traditionally rock that AC has been? In the baaa(aaack) of our old car? The biggest strength of Centipede songs is how complex a few of them are, and how their structures go through so many parts in such a short time. If you don't fuck with the album, I'm sure it can be grating. But in terms of AC doing garage rock, which is a disgustingly daft way to reduce it I know, it fits all these little btis of different flavors of pretty frantic energy into the song. This frantic energy is the the core of Chz, as the album is Anxiety, and in some ways, the album being as busy as it is can compliment that anxiety they are conveying through the music. It's why I think Mercury is the best song on here. Other times, it can turn into a mess like Monky rich.

Continuing on my diatribe, i find Chz to be a continuation of some of the themes of anxiety/dissociation/depression on Strawberry Jam, just kind've times'd ten, which is a lot especially bc Jam already had a song like Cuckoo which is times a thousand. Chz is kind've more confrontational about it. Here's what I mean: in a song like Safer, the way the mantra kinda corrupts itself is that of like a panic attack, and the statement itself is kind've yielding and passive which gives it so much weight as it breaks into screaming. "I'm alright if you're alright"... It feels the same on Street Flash or Rev Green, which are kind've like snide musings on shit in a pretty cynical light. Chz is the inverse of that, while both include screaming and noisy sections, Chz songs are much more in your face and almost angry about the pain their feeling. Todays Supernatural Avey yells to deal with it as he warps around the song's snake like structure, eventually ending in a pained scream w "the same." Amanita's anthemic last section rejecting modern bullshit, and my favorite Mercury's desperate howls lay anxieties about distance and separation bare with pretty vulnerable statements not masked by metaphor or anything. "If you could only feel what's wrong". Shit like that, which AC are fucking amazing at. That's why I feel this album has a strong emotional core as any other AC album, it just processes the emotions a little louder and . It calls back to Ark's reaction against a disrupted world, but more grounded and conventional. Funny, since a manufactured narrative around the time it seems started to pigeonhole AC into a chiller band off the success of MPP and Person Pitch.

On the flip, I feel as though Painting With is more of delightful introspection about the life and the minutia, which laid the ground work for stuff like Eucalyptus and Cows. But idk. Father time is a seriously sad song.

I think Panda works his ass off doing that drum rattle in Wide Eyed which is discernable for 2 seconds before it's drowned out by the be okay anyways Lol. Not that it matters too much i just think it's funny cuz im an asshole.
One problem w percussion: Occasionally, the shakers can make some of the more midtempo parts sound a bit same-y.

I'll prob shoot a bit more shit but I wanted get all this down. Love centipede, though I have my gripes for sure as everyone else. I'll leave it here: "To live with someone in the heart of nowhere" is one of the best things Avey ever wrote for sure. I love how mercury turned out though.
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Slippi's Applesauce


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Joined: Wed Jul 24, 2013 9:46 pm

Post Posted:

forgot oddsac whoops. haven't sat down and listened to this as an album in years

I feel like this is legit one of their best produced works. sounds so spacious and clear, makes me feel worse about how centipede's mixing/mastering sitch haha
It just sounds amazing, especially with the thunderous drums. Mr Fingers is enormous, one of their best and most intense sounding tracks. Kindle Song is nice, love Panda and Avey vocalizing through the end of the track. the next few tracks made me realize i might honestly prefer listening to oddsac than watching it, love closing my eyes and spacing out to Satin Orb Wash.

Screens is delicious, Panda at his most melodic. Only issue I have with it is that they both feel more like solo songs than ac. i know everyone is contributing but idk, not sure why i feel that way. amazing otherwise!! Avey's Working is amazing, almost like proto-Eucalyptus in his singing. Those blasts of drums and static scare me every time. Tantrum Barb is of course classic Panda, always been one of my personal favorites. super tribal and pretty unique lyrics for him imo.

Lady on the Lake is creepy and I fucking love the percussion. Never paid too much attention to it before but it's great. Fried Camp has those soul-piercing ping pongy synths with harmonies underneath. big fan of this too. What Happened is another all-time classic!

i understand why they never released this audio-only, and i do really dig danny perez's visuals, but this thing is insane. one of their weirdest latter-day releases and i wish more people could be exposed to these fantastic songs.
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