
Originally Posted by
Muttley on Fluid Radio
Sometimes music doesn’t become thinking material – you just embrace it for unconscious appeal hardwired into you. The Pop aesthetic thrives and survives on this ideal, transforming the most twee and seemingly meaningless song into a full-spectrum psychological rendition of progression, hereafter illusory digression from the norm. It helps that, in the last 20 years, after Britpop hogged the limelight and transfixed the dominant 90s working class audience, electronic soundsets began to re-haggle beyond dance floor and disco tagging, greeting central command of the Pop artist’s studio. Consider Moby transferring from Rave classic “Go” to radio-friendly “Porcelain”, featured in Leonardo Dicaprio-starring “The Beach”. Or where dubstep became modern comma on Electronica, you’ll find the fast-rising Delilah spinning Chaka Khan pop integration – also titled “Go” – into 140 beats-per-minute refractions, glueing popular culture to shorthand phrasing for what’s in, what’s selling, at this moment, but maybe not forever.
Nudging me regarding Pop now, is not song statement simplicity – palpable universally, unless we’re talking Felix Kubin robo-pop – but worldwide adhesion with conventional record marketing. I’ll call this underpinning an “attraction trio”: lust, infatuation and love. When applied to pop wholesale, this ever-moving triad designates itself in temporary emotional placements. Hooks and lyrics circularly keep flames burning between the three, yet paradoxically suffer attention deficit disorder, when enshrouded by the confines of Pop structure – the 3 minute love song; a reliance on artificiality; an emphasis on larger-than-life choruses. Ambient, especially drone, is interconnected – since while reference points differ – drone’s modulation and synthesis overriding sweetness and light – the emotional timeline remains rooted by the universe’s law of attraction. So those that make up our universe, turn over their thoughts like the pages of a never-ending book. And these ideas and beliefs – essentially – concantenate.
The merging of Pop and Ambient is just what Trouble Books, the husband/wife duo of Keith Freund and Linda Lejsovka, are signalling at on their latest LP, “Concantenating Fields”. Like their previous two LPs as Trouble Books – “The United Colours Of…” and “Gathered Tones”, the album length remains a very easy 30-40 minutes. Unlike Moby, Delilah, Felix Kubin et al, they’re at a stage of critical mass that’s really to be enamoured. Stylistically, opposing their last two albums, the soundsets have had paintstripper poured all over them, allowing the Pop, and Ambient to commingle less acoustically and more electronically. There’s still those snatches of the past: acoustic and electric guitar; an aura of condensing things, meeting self-targets and ressuscitating an internalised format – influence intake/consume/extract. As Pitchfork’s Zach Kelly wrote of their last, a self-titled collaboration with Emeralds’ Mark Mcguire, for example, “while their calm, flat vocals may prove a little too distracting for some”, they have gradually been reconfigured as socio-puzzle pieces, slotting in holes previously filled by noise, violin and a convergence of the maintained elements. Pulling a sweetheart, cordial mood nearer to electronic shoestring has now begun to take place.
As only two of the tracks on “Concantenating Fields” are instrumentals, it’s an important keystone for the couple’s innocent take on the normally banal Pop lyric, piloted by the attraction trio, to be vocally illuminated to fairy dust via limp-wristed singing and half-spoken word. Two highlights of this working are in “Lurk Underneath” and “Dead Bee In A Golden Bowl”, where Lejsovka and Freund alternate roles on “small modulations”; not having “much to say”, negating the OTT superficiality of lust/infatuation/love in Pop, preferring following up their affectionate interplay of, including other niceties, “You’ve got bigger plans than Monday’s garbage day”, from 2010′s “Sudden Loop”. Pop xenophilia: trying to trawl as many foreign bodies, customs and cultures into one industry-feeding phenomenon as possible, gets downcast here for continuity of artistic rudiments: alternative arpeggio/guitar flux, dancing like fireflies in background/foreground; tempo taken off high-speed railroad, preening something you might please yourself with when no-one else is looking. So, “Concantenating Fields” fits its “nocturnal” press thought, counterpointing earlier, rustic reinventions of the daily life cycle. Trouble Books transcendentally introspect also, bringing sunshine out at night, double-heading welcome of environmental impulse, manifesting it in Freund’s and Lejsovka’s attic, or Mike Tolan’s living room in Akron, Ohio.
Comparisons to Trouble Books’ Electronica-inclusive, sometimes dream, always Ambient-natured musicality also triad: as an oven-baked pie of Auburn Lull quirks, Christopher Willits’ soothing boundary surfing, and “Golden Hours” Brian Eno Pop. Bridging gaps between acoustica, modern circuitry and contemporary songwriting, indeed, the pair are said to apply Eno-ish “Oblique Strategies” – Josef Alber’s “Interaction Of Colour” book – their self-concantenation device. What separates Freund, and Lejsovka from average novelty-recording references is an unpretentious, carefree everyday matter musing, through sound pace, lyric to surface relationships, relishing personal integrity. The male/female baton passing of “Demagnetizer” evokes a satisfying call/response pitch; relaying into surrounding tunes’ instruments and vocals, causing intelligibility landslide. Immediate record satisfaction increases, and even though the drums are a little tepid, they direct you along the attraction trio – damageable by obviousness of LPs targeted at mass media, in a state of temporary inertia/ignorance/intrigue – one counter-triad to life’s brighter side. There’s also a project polarity occurring, mentioning Freund’s solo release, “Constant Comments”, reviewed by Fred Nolan on Fluid in July 2011. Noting there that the titles, among other things, were rather abstruse, “Concantenating Fields” couldn’t be so alike even if the inspiration antenna was tossed down a ditch and left to pick itself up, by memory one, then memory two.
As with field recordings’ multiple-take-to-get-right, cutting out sentences that say all the right things, hit all the right notes, discarding the rest, is a by-product of love diffusing in some relationships, focusing on work that resists any kind of conflict with antimatter devices: tunnel-vision, sleep deprivation, the be-all times, the end-all times, where the transience of experiences create increased immersions the further poles apart these are in stimulative quality. The “concantenating” title link of Trouble Books’ record aligns well with the concept of musical conjunctio: a term from alchemy meaning conjunction and pressure of dissimilar elements within one psychic space, where positive feelings, knowledge and insightful observations spawn transformatively. The trimming of sentences to words, and reimpressioning of them into sonic passages with the synthesizers, including those “Collapsed Arpeggios”, sees Freund and Lejsovka cover ground well worn by many synth pop, any-subgenre-you-like Pop on top, as well as Moby, Delilah and Felix Kubin. Nevertheless, if Ambient is to, in future become a form of postmodern anti-pop – and some would argue this already happened by scenic design since the late eighties – it makes sense for Trouble Books to be seen as a crossover exponent of the two genres.
Conclusively, as much as you might lust about it, as attraction gives to many men and women humanistically; as much you might get infatuated with it, as is conditioned to women and men temporarily, you’ll grow to love “Concantenating Fields”, for a long time to come. Or so you should. It may only be an album of grass thoughts, as Freund has it, but as written by Max Ehrmann in 1952′s “Desiderata”:
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“Neither be cynical about love;
For in the face of all aridity and disenchantment
It is as perennial as the grass.”
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Here’s to the next Ambient Pop LP that manages to absorb thinking material like that.
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