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A Light Far Out
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A Light Far Out
Current price: $19.99
Barnes and Noble
A Light Far Out
Current price: $19.99
Size: OS
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The full return of
the Wake
to recording activity after an initial restart in 2009 might almost seem more quixotic than anything else, but what's surprisingly satisfying about 2012's
A Light Far Out
is how sweetly perfect it is in the end, a showcase for the central duo of
Caesar
and
Carolyn Allen
continuing on from their
Sarah Records
years as if there hadn't been any interruption. Then again, that's not quite true: without radically reinventing anything, there's evidence throughout that
know fully well what year it is without completely surrendering their aesthetic. Thus whether it's the tinge of classic
Timbaland
rhythms underscoring "Methodist" or the polite glitch on "If the Ravens Leave," it's a series of subtle acknowledgments to the years, all while serenely beautiful and often melancholy arrangements and songs softly unfold across the album's length. "Stockport" starts it all with the kind of gentle groove one might expect, less jangle than almost
Pulp
-like dreams of something else, rinky-dink end-of-the-pier keyboard runs and all (perfectly matching the cover art), while the guitar wash and blast at the end provide just the right amount of loudness, part gaze and still serene.
handles most of the singing throughout, but
Allen
's stepping to the fore on "Starry Day" is a calm comedown to the immediately preceding "The Back of Beyond," the album's peppiest song along with the excellent instrumental "Faintness." The highlight, perhaps appropriately, is the lengthy title track, with the midsong break and switch to a really lovely guitar/keyboard-led conclusion sounding like the majestic moment intended as a payoff for listening to the album as a whole. It's all very formal but it works very well. ~ Ned Raggett
the Wake
to recording activity after an initial restart in 2009 might almost seem more quixotic than anything else, but what's surprisingly satisfying about 2012's
A Light Far Out
is how sweetly perfect it is in the end, a showcase for the central duo of
Caesar
and
Carolyn Allen
continuing on from their
Sarah Records
years as if there hadn't been any interruption. Then again, that's not quite true: without radically reinventing anything, there's evidence throughout that
know fully well what year it is without completely surrendering their aesthetic. Thus whether it's the tinge of classic
Timbaland
rhythms underscoring "Methodist" or the polite glitch on "If the Ravens Leave," it's a series of subtle acknowledgments to the years, all while serenely beautiful and often melancholy arrangements and songs softly unfold across the album's length. "Stockport" starts it all with the kind of gentle groove one might expect, less jangle than almost
Pulp
-like dreams of something else, rinky-dink end-of-the-pier keyboard runs and all (perfectly matching the cover art), while the guitar wash and blast at the end provide just the right amount of loudness, part gaze and still serene.
handles most of the singing throughout, but
Allen
's stepping to the fore on "Starry Day" is a calm comedown to the immediately preceding "The Back of Beyond," the album's peppiest song along with the excellent instrumental "Faintness." The highlight, perhaps appropriately, is the lengthy title track, with the midsong break and switch to a really lovely guitar/keyboard-led conclusion sounding like the majestic moment intended as a payoff for listening to the album as a whole. It's all very formal but it works very well. ~ Ned Raggett