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Once More with Feeling...
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Once More with Feeling...
Current price: $14.98
Barnes and Noble
Once More with Feeling...
Current price: $14.98
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Montreal-based art rockers
Ought
delivered their ecstatic debut,
More Than Any Other Day
, in the spring of 2014 and followed just months later with this four-song EP,
Once More with Feeling...
, in the fall of the same year. The album was a tightly coiled collection of sometimes noisy, always jubilant tunes with influences going back to the best college rock standouts of several generations. The band drew on influence from
Talking Heads
,
the Feelies
, the dour melodicism of early New Zealand pop groups, and even some of the sentimental urgency of '90s Midwestern emo groups like
Cap'n Jazz
. About half the length of its LP predecessor,
is equally as strong in its material, though perhaps a little more experimental and unrefined in parts. Highlights are found in the first half of the set with low-key opener "Pill" and the bounding groove of "New Calm, Pt. 2." Both songs find singer
Tim Beeler
expressing his inner
David Byrne
, but where "Pill" lingers in woozy, narcotic sleepiness, "New Calm, Pt. 2" crackles with energy and fun.
Beeler
proclaims "I love this one!" before the band kicks into a repetitive explosion as a backdrop for his sometimes spoken lyrics and wordless hollering. As well as the aforementioned
Byrne-isms
, the song has the same ungrounded danger as
the Fall
and hints of the type of self-aware humor that made
LCD Soundsystem
special. "New Calm, Pt. 3" is a noisy, feedback-heavy throwaway track, but the band returns to form with the
New Order-y
closing track "Waiting." Though brief and not quite as immediately likable as the debut,
offers even more to love from a promising band relatively fresh into its existence. The energy and spark that
base their sound on carries much in common with the best of their influences, finding new ways to sound fresh and exciting even in this short sampling. ~ Fred Thomas
Ought
delivered their ecstatic debut,
More Than Any Other Day
, in the spring of 2014 and followed just months later with this four-song EP,
Once More with Feeling...
, in the fall of the same year. The album was a tightly coiled collection of sometimes noisy, always jubilant tunes with influences going back to the best college rock standouts of several generations. The band drew on influence from
Talking Heads
,
the Feelies
, the dour melodicism of early New Zealand pop groups, and even some of the sentimental urgency of '90s Midwestern emo groups like
Cap'n Jazz
. About half the length of its LP predecessor,
is equally as strong in its material, though perhaps a little more experimental and unrefined in parts. Highlights are found in the first half of the set with low-key opener "Pill" and the bounding groove of "New Calm, Pt. 2." Both songs find singer
Tim Beeler
expressing his inner
David Byrne
, but where "Pill" lingers in woozy, narcotic sleepiness, "New Calm, Pt. 2" crackles with energy and fun.
Beeler
proclaims "I love this one!" before the band kicks into a repetitive explosion as a backdrop for his sometimes spoken lyrics and wordless hollering. As well as the aforementioned
Byrne-isms
, the song has the same ungrounded danger as
the Fall
and hints of the type of self-aware humor that made
LCD Soundsystem
special. "New Calm, Pt. 3" is a noisy, feedback-heavy throwaway track, but the band returns to form with the
New Order-y
closing track "Waiting." Though brief and not quite as immediately likable as the debut,
offers even more to love from a promising band relatively fresh into its existence. The energy and spark that
base their sound on carries much in common with the best of their influences, finding new ways to sound fresh and exciting even in this short sampling. ~ Fred Thomas