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Music > Reviews > Japancakes JapancakesGiving Machines(Darla) US release date: 9 October 2007 UK release date: 2 October 2007 Internet release date: 2 October 2007 JapancakesLoveless(Darla) US release date: 7 November 2007 UK release date: 2 October 2007 By Nate DorrSo you want to set up lofty, challenging, okay, in fact completely unreasonable goals for yourself? Really? Well then, why not take on a widely accepted classic. Cover a song with which, even a decade and a half down the line, much of the indie-record-buying public, your present and potential audience, have some kind of passionate (maybe personal) involvement. Or if they haven’t, then won’t be especially interested anyway. None of this bringing the lesser-known work of a master to light business will do, just shoot straight for the gold, the unimpeachable pinnacle. Hell, why stop there, why not just do the whole album while you’re at it? Of course, you’re going to be faithful to the original. Sure, change the genre around a bit, re-imagine it, but keep things close enough to make direct comparison inevitable. Yeah, this is going to be virtually impossible to pull off to anyone’s satisfaction. You are Japancakes and you are attempting to cover, in its entirety, My Bloody Valentine’s Loveless. This is all well and good and the same clean, clear instrumental harmonies that worked reasonably well on Loveless are all in effect here again, but really it’s a pretty undemanding album of the listener. Which is fine for background music, perhaps, or dinner music (indeed, this would be extremely pleasant, and even fairly classy, as dinner music), but these harmless melodies have a tendency to go down so easily that nothing really sticks after the album finishes. Working with the listener can be good but coddling is always unnecessary. As such, there’s no trace of dissonance here, the moods are fairly middle-of-the-road and never dig to deep at any ambiguous emotional territory, and, of course, there’s never anything even slightly jarring or noisy. Removing noise from My Bloody Valentine songs is the more obvious detoothing, but the songs on Giving Machines seem never to have teethed at all. Somewhat ironically, given that this is the non-covers disc, the strongest track seems to be a cover of the Cocteau Twins’ “Heaven or Las Vegas”. The song benefits from opening solidly with contrasting layers of crisp descending electric guitar, strummed rhythm, subtle but insistent bass, and soon, twanging steel (carrying, I believe, the original vocal line). Keys sweep in to buoy up the chorus. Perhaps I’m just less familiar with the original, or perhaps the Cocteau Twins’ brand of ethereal harmony just lends itself better to Japancakes’ approach, but the track seems to stand on its own better than anything else on either album. “Lalita”, the other standout, emphasizes the dynamic of pedal steel on strings, sounding something like a Hawaiian chamber orchestra. Other tracks, like opener “Double Jointed” or “Tracing New Maps” can feel like they spend six or seven minutes in mild-mannered prettiness without doing anything particular of note. Japancakes seem to have drifted quite a ways from their drone origins. There’s still a muted quality to the work they’re producing now, but they’ve applied it to a decidedly pop context. It’s occasionally lovely, always effortlessly competent, and while a body of work can perhaps survive by those traits alone, it isn’t likely to distinguish itself. This doesn’t have anything like the compositional tension and complexity of alternate post-drone chamber orchestra Stars of the Lid, or the dense texturing of up-and-coming improvisational strings-and-noise outfit Lonely Ghost. Japancakes are making inoffensive but effective chamber pop (whether out of the My Bloody Valentine catalog or on their own) and that’s either already enough, or it will leave you seeking something a little deeper.
10 October 2007Related Articles
Japancakes: Soon/TouchedBy Zach Schonfeld02.Sep.08 Whether you’re a Japancakes or a MBV fan, stick with the 2007 Loveless tribute.
Japancakes: If I Could See Dallas / Down the Elements / The Sleepy StrangeBy Kevin Pearson14.Mar.08 Worthy re-release of three improvised and instrumental albums that mix symphonic drone pop with a dash of pedal steel. The Best Indie-Pop of 2007By Dave Heaton12.Dec.07 2007 was a year of independent thinking, where fresh and experienced bands alike stubbornly set off on their own course. |
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