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A Hound at the Hem [LP]
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A Hound at the Hem [LP]
Current price: $15.99
Barnes and Noble
A Hound at the Hem [LP]
Current price: $15.99
Size: CD
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Output from Canadian sound experimenter and garbage rock madman
has always been a grab bag of styles and rapid-fire ideas. Rudimentary samples, rockabilly riffing, and hints of noise, glam, and punk theatrics all found their way into
's various projects as his creative drive morphed from record to record and project to project.
is another in a long line of his complex and sometimes brain-melting recordings, but it's easily the most dense and possibly most remarkable entry in his already widely varying catalog. The eight-song album hangs together on loosely connected themes of lust and self-destruction, but doesn't really come across as a concept album. Instead,
packs the brief album's chapters so densely with sound and energy, the songs almost imply a heavy narrative with their weighty, damaged psychedelia. Within the space of the first minute or two of album opener "Heavy Splendour,"
evokes some of the masters of art rock and outsider music.
's gliding string arrangements willfully nod to the thick atmospheres of
's
, and the rock minimalism and bellowed vocals recall
,
, and
all within the first few minutes of the album. Equal parts dark, brooding rock and fragile chamber pop,
walks a conflicted line for its entire duration, resulting in an extremely high-strung, tense-feeling album that paradoxically rides on the strength of its most gentle elements. Baroque harpsichord and
pop moodiness on "Shroud by the Sheetful" give way to tropicalia fuzz guitar, dubby echoes, and
-like keyboard harshness on songs like "Maintain the Charade." The album flies by, but reveals more layers with every subsequent pass. By the end of the album, the pastiche of various unlikely influences sounds more like
's own weird voice than a calculated amalgam, and the struggle between darkness and beauty in these songs becomes more of a focus than the many obscure musical reference points they contain. ~ Fred Thomas