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Tag Archive for 'Lost In Space'

Lost in Space: Windy and Carl’s Depths

lostinspace Lost in Space: Windy and Carls Depths

The second album by husband and wife duo Windy and Carl, Depths, is a total immersion in psych-rock’s love of distortion. As waves of feedback cycle past, you hear maybe two or three notes ring out, fighting their way past the overdriven din.  Unlike My Bloody Valentine’s Loveless, which countless critics and listeners got once they heard the melodies underneath, Depths isn’t about using overdriven feedback and loop pedals to transform rock music, it’s about making those things the whole show. And yet there are melodies there, or at least repetitive pleasant tones. If Windy and Carl were trying to make difficult music, they would constantly shift the structure of the music and interject dissonant notes and sounds just to keep the listener off balance; instead they find a few gorgeous notes, then rinse (in layers of feedback and echo and reverb) and repeat.

Because the group uses such simple melodies, interjecting a minor note or chord has a huge impact on the mood of the song. On “Sirens,” a reoccurring minor chord spoils a two note ascending melody line and the whole song becomes tense and scary. And yet, by the end of the song, you’ve adapted to this sound and what sounded tense before now sounds majestic. In a similar way, “Undercurrent” begins as a menacing ballad, with a reverb heavy bass line very similar to the one on Sonic Youth’s “Shadow of a Doubt,” but unlike that song, it never builds into a rocker, content to just be creepy and full of foreboding.

41gFq9pG2lL._SL500_AA240_ Lost in Space: Windy and Carls DepthsOne of the most exciting things about Depths (and space rock in general) is that when it clicks with you (and chances are if you’re reading this site it’s going to click with you), you realize that dynamics in music can be very overrated. Why does a song that starts out slow and calm have to build in intensity? So many musical tricks appear to be utilized for the benefit of someone listening to a song for the first time, and those same tricks can begin to sound stale and unnecessary on the fourth of fifth listen. Claiming music like this “goes nowhere” is to assume that music has some sort of destination and that it will only ever sound fully realized when it gets there.

With song titles like “Aquatica” and “Undercurrent” and “Set Adrift,” Depths is clearly connected to water and thus–horrible, horrible cliche alert–it makes for perfect rainy day music. But don’t read “rainy day” as shorthand for melancholy and sad; what makes Depths such a perfect soundtrack for rainy weather is the way the sound of the rain on your window or the hood of your coat melds so naturally with the music, or the way the music mimics closeness to water without total immersion in it.

On more recent albums like Consciousness and 2008’s Songs for the Broken Hearted, Windy and Carl have begun to clean up their sound a little bit, and as much as I like the way better production has revealed the beauty of their guitar and bass work, I also miss the heavy, frayed at the edges sound of their earlier stuff. There are moments on Depths where you can hear a guitar note bend and break under the weight of distortion, and that for me so perfectly sums up the way space rock fulfills psychedelic rock’s mission of finding beauty in pushing sound to its breaking point.

MP3 :::
Windy and Carl – Set Adrift

Lost in Space: A New Feature

lostinspace Lost in Space: A New Feature

About a week ago, I spent a couple of hours on YouTube looking up a bunch of space rock bands I was unfamiliar with, like Tomorrowland and Fuxa and Auburn Lull. What I came away with was an even greater appreciation of the genre and the moods it evokes, as well as a clearer understanding of how space rock fits into the history of psychedelic music as a whole. Thus, in the hopes of increasing appreciation for the sort of forgotten genre and of exploring the reasons for its demise (as well as its interesting resurgence in odd places like TV soundtracks and commercials), I’m starting a series called Lost in Space: Lost Space Rock Classics.

Most popular in the late 80s and early 90s and often shoehorned into a Michigan based scene because so many of the bands came from there, space rock is the sound of psychedelic rock letting go of its roots in blues rock and folk music and embracing a sound that is equal parts heavy, hypnotic, and gorgeous. Often epitomized by the title of Spacemen’s 1990’s demo collection Taking Drugs to Make Music to Take Drugs To, space rock is certainly catnip for stoners and folks taking magic mushrooms, but it can be just as powerful to someone with a good pair of headphones. Borrowing heavily from ambient music and the raga drones of La Monte Young, space rock often abandons typical music dynamics, instead spending its time working away at one perfect riff for nine or ten minutes, using guitar pedals and E-bows and various production effects to subtly tweak the sound of the music without disturbing its blissful center.

As I mentioned above, the influence of space rock has crept into TV soundtracks and commercials, with the incidental music on shows like Friday Night Lights sounding like Auburn Lull or later Windy and Carl. The sound of ringing guitar lines and gentle airy synth pad major chords has become the new piano and strings. With the hindsight of almost twenty years, this makes perfect sense. Besides being gorgeous sounding and repetitive, two prerequisites for most TV and film music, there’s also something ambiguous about the space rock sound, a strange tension between uplift and sadness, drugginess and clear minded meditation, flying and drowning, that can be used to great effect in multi-layered dramas like Friday Night Lights.

Anyway, see you here next week for the first entry in the series, Windy and Carl’s Depths.

MP3 :::
Auburn Lull – Direction and Destination