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Appetite
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Appetite
Current price: $15.99
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Barnes and Noble
Appetite
Current price: $15.99
Size: CD
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Walter TV
came into a full state of being around 2011 when multi-talented musicians
Pierce McGarry
and
Joe McMurray
moved from their home of Vancouver, B.C. into a house in Montreal with goof-pop solo artist
Mac DeMarco
and a host of other creative types. The band had recently gone from a trio to a duo, and shortly after their move
McMurray
McGarry
would sign on as the touring rhythm section for
DeMarco
's increasingly busy touring schedule, but before that transition, they crafted
Appetite
, the gloriously strange debut full-length from the
project. Though they would often be misrepresented in the press as "
's other band,"
has no credits on
, and the closer one listens to the album, the further it gets from his low-key stoner pop sound. A far better reference point would be the more manic side of
Animal Collective
, with
's jubilant, chorus-drenched howls on songs like "Lo Noise" sounding remarkably like
Avey Tare
's shouts on his band's more rock-oriented breakthrough album,
Feels
. There are elements of surfy guitar and saturated home-recording production at play, too, and the best elements of
's bustling approach to songwriting come together nicely on dynamic tracks like "Africa." This song's striding bassline pushes the verses along in a jumpy rush until the pleasantly obnoxious screams of the choruses offer some relief from the building tension of the song. "Puka Shell Necklace" is perhaps the nexus point of the various influences informing
's strange and anxiously catchy sound. A bleary-eyed tempo guides brash, direct-input acoustic guitars and highly effected, trippy vocals in a rush of laid-back watery sounds. It's not slacker pop or freak folk, and not really anywhere in between, either, but
do offer up their own demented look at pop that wanders between all these various modes like a child happily lost at an amusement park. ~ Fred Thomas
came into a full state of being around 2011 when multi-talented musicians
Pierce McGarry
and
Joe McMurray
moved from their home of Vancouver, B.C. into a house in Montreal with goof-pop solo artist
Mac DeMarco
and a host of other creative types. The band had recently gone from a trio to a duo, and shortly after their move
McMurray
McGarry
would sign on as the touring rhythm section for
DeMarco
's increasingly busy touring schedule, but before that transition, they crafted
Appetite
, the gloriously strange debut full-length from the
project. Though they would often be misrepresented in the press as "
's other band,"
has no credits on
, and the closer one listens to the album, the further it gets from his low-key stoner pop sound. A far better reference point would be the more manic side of
Animal Collective
, with
's jubilant, chorus-drenched howls on songs like "Lo Noise" sounding remarkably like
Avey Tare
's shouts on his band's more rock-oriented breakthrough album,
Feels
. There are elements of surfy guitar and saturated home-recording production at play, too, and the best elements of
's bustling approach to songwriting come together nicely on dynamic tracks like "Africa." This song's striding bassline pushes the verses along in a jumpy rush until the pleasantly obnoxious screams of the choruses offer some relief from the building tension of the song. "Puka Shell Necklace" is perhaps the nexus point of the various influences informing
's strange and anxiously catchy sound. A bleary-eyed tempo guides brash, direct-input acoustic guitars and highly effected, trippy vocals in a rush of laid-back watery sounds. It's not slacker pop or freak folk, and not really anywhere in between, either, but
do offer up their own demented look at pop that wanders between all these various modes like a child happily lost at an amusement park. ~ Fred Thomas