LOQUAT
It's Yours to Keep
(Jackpine Social Club)
Rating: 5
US release date: 31 May 2005
UK release date: Available as import
by Peter Funk

:. e-mail this article
:. print this article
:. comment on this article

For those of you who need a touch of guidance in trying to place music into an appropriate setting I've come up with this handy list of things to do while listening to Loquat's It's Yours to Keep. They can be performed in any order and need not be attempted all in one sitting:

  • Drive to work early in the morning with the sun in your face.
  • Tap your feet distractedly while you read the sports page.
  • Make sweet sweet love to your number one sweetie.
  • Play Backgammon.
  • Read the new issue of The Week.
  • Wink slyly at the guy or girl who serves you coffee in the morning.
  • Break up with someone and be sad.
  • Attempt clairvoyance.
  • Dig up that 12-inch of Real Life's "Send Me an Angel" you forgot that you hid in the closet in 1991.
  • Smoke pot.
  • Smoke more pot and eat cinnamon toast.

I certainly don't intend this list to be exhaustive. But if ever there was good background music, It's Yours to Keep is it. Able to comfortably and unobtrusively fit into almost any environment, save perhaps a mugging, It's Yours to Keep isn't going to knock any socks off; it will however provide an excellent soundtrack to the taking off of socks. If nothing else Loquat recalls a more somnambulant disinterested Morcheeba or the jazz lite stylings of early Everything But The Girl.

The most disheartening thing about It's Yours to Keep is that there are very good songs on this album. Songs like "Take It Back", "Swingset Chain" and "Change The Station" all illustrate Loquat's strengths and weaknesses. Each song has a smoky smooth head-nodding beat that's subtly accented with short chiming guitar chords, electronic blips, light keyboard and lead singer Kylee Swenson's sultry vocals; there are moments of sublime melody in each that don't get lost as much as they get ignored. The problem is that even in the midst of It's Yours to Keep's finest moments none of the songs are particularly distinguishable from each other: beats are smooth and steady, Swenson's voice is pretty but she's never pushed past her comfort zone, the rhythm section of drummer Christopher Lautz and bassist Anthony Gordon is clearly capable but too comfortable. This all may be due to the fact the record was home produced by Swenson and guitarist Earl Otsuka. Sometimes the best thing a band can do is to let a semi removed (se objective) third party bring out angles within songs that the band may not hear.

Loquat seems to have become so focused on It's Yours to Keep with nurturing their particular brand of beat lite groove that they polished it into submission. The segue between "Rocks" and "Slow, Fast, Wait & See" is so seamless that only the most attentive listening will pick up the transition from song to song. Eventually your ears will simply become so accustomed to the easy tones of It's Yours to Keep that the album runs the risk of not being noticed at all. That's okay as we all need something to space out to. I'm just surprised that such a clearly talented band decided to write the soundtrack.

— 1 June 2005

TODAY ON POPMATTERS
Film | recent | archive
:. Disfigured

RECENT MUSIC
In bold are PopMatters Picks, the best in new music.
CD REVIEWS
Abe Duque
be your own PET
Big Sandy & His Fly-Rite Boys
The Bottle Rockets
The Brand New Heavies
Camille
Johnny Cash
Slaid Cleaves
Elvis Costello & Allen Toussaint
Cut Chemist
Dabrye
Miles Davis
Daedelus
Dinosaur Jr.
Dr. Octagon
Alejandro Escovedo
Fatboy Slim
Four Tet
The Handsome Family
Matthew Herbert
India.Arie
Ise Lyfe
Jefferson Airplane
Kaada
Keane
Lord Jamar
Mission of Burma
Mr. Lif
Mojave 3
Allison Moorer
Paul Oakenfold
Oneida
Grant-Lee Phillips
Priestess
The Procussions
Corinne Bailey Rae
Ramblin' Jack Elliott
Rhymefest
Julie Roberts
Diana Ross
7L & Esoteric
Alice Smith
Snow Patrol
Sonic Youth
Soul Asylum
Sound Team
Regina Spektor
Sufjan Stevens
Matthew Sweet
Vetiver
Rhonda Vincent
Wa-Zimba
Thom Yorke

EVENT REVIEWS
Baby Dayliner
The BellRays
Brookville
Cat Power
The Clientele + Great Lakes
The Coup + T-Kash
Mike Doughty Band
Download Festival 2006
Fiery Furnaces + Man Man
The Futureheads
The Handsome Family
High Sierra Music Festival
Billy Idol
Joi
Bettye Lavette
Love Parade
Nine Inch Nails + Bauhaus
Pretenders
Sonic Youth
Splendour in the Grass 2006
The Streets
Sunset Rubdown

 
advertising | about | contributors | submissions
© 1999-2008 PopMatters.com. All rights reserved.
PopMatters.com™ and PopMatters™ are trademarks of PopMatters Media, Inc. and PopMatters Magazine.