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Broken social scene allmusic
Broken social scene allmusic









broken social scene allmusic
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By the time they’re through, you’re exhausted right along with them, dazed but satisfied.

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Finally, horns come barreling in like a spastic college marching band doing a halftime show, concluding the album with a series of triumphant, brassy bursts. One moment, it soars into a cymbal-crashing crescendo the next, it drops down into a jazzy crawl, the song collapsing into itself, barely held together by a lazy beat and the heavy breathing of the backup singers. The album is capped by a ten-minute opus called “It’s All Gonna Break,” which is described in the liner notes as “Bob Seger on acid.” It starts off, innocently enough, as a twangy alt-country anthem, then goes off the rails. Broken Social Scene has pulled off the rare feat of making a heavily produced record sound instinctive and spontaneous. The results are woolly and weird, but never predictable or dutiful. Perhaps, then, Newf is the egocentric control freak that this collective needed. We loved him, we hated him, he drove us completely insane.” We’d come back into the studio to work and he’d have been up all night working on six different mixes of a song, or having chopped up an extended jam into three different songs. Kevin Drew, a founding member of Broken Social Scene, told me in a phone interview that “Newf would never just let us stay on one path. And yet they are bound by the mad science of producer Dave Newfeld, who treats each song as a mini-epic. It’s possible to mistake the fourteen tracks here as the work of fourteen separate groups. What Broken Social Scene has apparently done is abandon the pretense of even trying to sound like a coherent band. I began to understand the album as a kind of sprawling flea market a couple of gems in clear view, then a vast pile of odds and ends in which each piece shines a little brighter every time you rummage through the junk.Īs a work of unfettered self-indulgence, this one leaves You Forgot It in People thoroughly in the dust.

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Then the strings and horns kick in for full symphonic effect, and Broken Social Scene is off on its own peculiar and magnificent odyssey.īefore long, I was listening compulsively to the entire album, mesmerized by the band’s gaudy eccentricities, from the groovy falsetto of “Hotel” to the stop-and-start, hand-clapping madness of “Windsurfing Nation” (which is where K-OS makes his mercifully brief cameo). Then there’s “Ibi Dreams of Pavement (A Better Day),” an homage to those patron saints of indie rock, Pavement Stephen Malkmus himself hasn’t put out a song this good since “Crooked Rain.” Through the first several bars of shaggy guitar chords and wobbly vocals, it even sounds like it is Pavement. “7/4 (Shoreline)” is a deeply effective pop tune: A crisp, skipping drumbeat supports a seductive vocal by Leslie Feist (who happens to have her own flourishing solo career). Naturally, he’s a “conscious” rapper they’re the kind who hate your hate.īut as I got around to actually listening to the CD, a couple of songs immediately sunk their hooks into me.

#Broken social scene allmusic plus

My relationship with Broken Social Scene’s new self-titled CD got off to an inauspicious start when I flipped open the case and was greeted by the message “We hate your hate.” Soldiering on, I read the credits and noticed that the “collective” had swelled to seventeen members, an awful lot of cooks for simple fare like rock music, plus four guests, one of whom is the rapper K-OS. Wasn’t Canada just the coolest? And by the slack standards of indie rock, the album even sold well: about 80,000 copies in the U.S. People liked the fact that just about every Canadian band of note was either represented in the collective or was just a degree or two separated.

broken social scene allmusic

Broken Social Scene was celebrated by critics for its dramatic flair and for high-degree-of-difficulty stunts like slipping a trombone into the mix and making it sound like it belonged. You Forgot It in People was a critical smash, paving the way for the great musical invasion from the north that’s still going strong today (Wolf Parade and Constantines are worthy of attention). To my ears, it sounded like a class project.

broken social scene allmusic

The melodies were sweet, but the arrangements suffered from too much democracy-a whole bunch of different singers and every instrumentalist under the sun: banjo pickers, violinists, horn blowers, you name it. debut, 2003’s You Forgot It in People, seemed to bear this out, buckling under the weight of its good intentions.

broken social scene allmusic

I’m all for collaboration, but given that the Ringos of the world outnumber the Pauls and Johns, I much prefer egocentric control freaks. Broken Social Scene is usually described as “a rock collective,” a term that makes me want to gag.











Broken social scene allmusic