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Animal Collective "Merriweather Post Pavillion" Ne

Posted: Sun Jan 04, 2009 7:37 pm
by godflesh fiend
The new Animal Collective album drops on the 12th although independant record stores will be selling the vinyl tommorow! I've already scored my vinyl (which comes with free MP3 download code) and this will easily be the best album of 2009 without breaking a sweat. This album is absolutely superb. After listening to this beast you just think to yourself..........WOW!!!

I love AC's stuff but this new one blows all of their previous shit out of the water!

Do yourself a favour and score this album ASAP!

Here's a review about the new album.................


ANIMAL COLLECTIVE "MERRIWEATHER POST PAVILLION"

"On the 3rd December, I was one of the few handful of people lucky enough to hear the brand new (9th, if you’re counting) album from Baltimore, Maryland’s finest, Animal Collective at the not-so top secret location of ‘Plastic People’. It’s called Merriweather Post Pavilion and it’s not out until January 12 and no, that’s not my pee on the floor due to the sheer excitement and anticipation I was feeling. It’s…er… just been raining next to my feet…

Having already heard some of the material live on their last few London concerts and pretty much falling in love with a lot of the songs, including the recently available album closer ‘Brothersport’, thanks to the internets (Not Grizzly Bears blog I must add) I was intrigued to hear how the final recorded, mixed and mastered end product sounded. Of course no listening party would be complete with people talking all over the record and paying absolutely no attention to the music but I’ll do my best!

Arriving just before it all kicks off, I make myself comfortable with a glass of wine and wait patiently. Then this ambient hum gets louder and louder. It sounds ancient. I know this noise. I’d heard this track when it was under the moniker, ‘Dancer with flowers in her hair’. It’s now called ‘In The Flowers’ and opens Merriweather. A noise not too dissimilar to a far away train coming closer and closer as it creeps in to the mix. An absolutely delicious acoustic guitar refrain repeats again. And again. Avey Taye sings about getting high, having good rhythm, and missing his wife before the sounds erupts into pure heavenly ecstasy as synths swirl and the bass disturbs your stomach. The climax is almost brutally hypnotic. People are nodding with approval. The other heads are simply swaying from side to side transfixed to the music. It’s a genius start to the record and, just WOW. Fuck.

The Panda Bear inspired ‘My Girls’ sounds ethereal and tightly packed. Beginning with swirling piano and lively vocal samples, it boasts a thriving break that is irresistibly danceable. ‘Summertime Clothes’ sounds so infectious that you could see American children dancing to it on a hot day in Brooklyn, to water from fire-hydrant stations. One of my personal highlights from the record is ‘Daily Routine’. Panda Bear contributes his refined and reverb-drenched vocal as keyboard notes speed up, speed up, stop, speed up until it nicely comes together. It sounds completely insane but perfectly normal in context for the music they make. One thing that dawned on me very quickly is just how much the group progressed again with his record, musically and sonically. Its sounds dynamic but never a challenge. Perhaps they are becoming more accessible to the masses as the vocals and lyrical structure become more apparent, coherent and understandable for the listener but it’s not in any way detriment to the music. It just displays the natural evolution of the group I suppose.

The tail end of the record winds down with the slow and unwieldy ‘Taste’ and ‘Lion in a Coma’ displays terrific hollow tones driven by a didgeridoo, but it would be rude to finish on such a somber note. Thankfully, ‘Brothersport’ raises the tempo and pure insanity stakes with its repeated mantra (”Open up your - Open up your - Open up your – Open up your door!”) with its child like naivety and enthusiasm and techno beats. It plays out on what seems like an endless loop before breaking down to deep and heavy bass and screeching blips that ping to the acid-house trance beats. In a perfect world, club goers worldwide would revel in this euphoria from the dance floors of Ministry to the foam-soaked cages in Ibiza. Sublime.

I remember a wise man once said: “Ultimately, I would prefer to listen to this record on repeated listens and in a more private environment. Listening to the record while a hundred or so people chat away isn’t exactly the most ideal conditions to fully absorb the music I’m sure you’ll agree, but from what I heard, and what I remember, this record has definite moments of instant genius, but it’s the more subdued tracks which I’m intrigued and keen to listen to again.” – That was me. In fact, at the last listening party I went to (FYI, TV on the Radio). But I repeat my statement. It would be an injustice since the songs are so lushly layered that they need sole attention and a quality pair of Sennheisers. I can’t wait really.

But on first impressions, I’m pretty certain that when end-of-list-season comes around again in 2009, this bad boy will be topping most of those polls, mark my words."


DEVASTATING!!!!!!

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Posted: Sun Jan 04, 2009 9:03 pm
by datura
Looking forward to this, AC are one of the most interesting and creative bands around, although sometimes they are a little too experimental for my tastes.

Posted: Sun Jan 04, 2009 9:58 pm
by juliun_c90
i've heard a lot of hype about this one. i really want it to live up. i think they're a brilliant band but i've always had the feeling they've never really achieved what they're potentially capable of. will be copping this one fo sho.

Posted: Sun Jan 04, 2009 10:50 pm
by optimum
juliun_c90 wrote:i've heard a lot of hype about this one. i really want it to live up. i think they're a brilliant band but i've always had the feeling they've never really achieved what they're potentially capable of. will be copping this one fo sho.
I agree, just oredered it so we'll see. Supposed to be a lot of bass on this records, maybe it's burial's influence ha ha (Panda Bear's a big fan I read somewhere)

Posted: Mon Jan 05, 2009 3:17 pm
by juliun_c90
blimey- this record has more leaks than a grounded oil tanker.

hey web sheriff: will be purchasing though :wink:

Posted: Mon Jan 05, 2009 5:29 pm
by andreamia
can't wait to trip out staring at the vinyl cover tomorrow

Posted: Tue Jan 06, 2009 8:17 am
by atomrattoe
While I've completely enjoyed this so far, I still prefer Sung Tongs. Can't wait to see them on the 22nd, then just a short walk down stairs for Caspa latenight @ Smartbar. Perfect night.

Posted: Tue Jan 06, 2009 10:23 am
by abs
It's like the beach boys on crack.

Posted: Tue Jan 06, 2009 2:52 pm
by andreamia
Abs wrote:It's like the beach boys on crack.
i thought beach boys on acid, but you say tomato

Posted: Tue Jan 06, 2009 3:22 pm
by oxide
i just red critics, they said thats amazing, cant wait.

Posted: Tue Jan 06, 2009 3:49 pm
by juliun_c90
some quite bassy stuff on there from what little i've heard. quite surprised me.

Posted: Tue Jan 06, 2009 3:52 pm
by godflesh fiend
juliun_c90 wrote:some quite bassy stuff on there from what little i've heard. quite surprised me.

Yeah Animal Collective do tend to surprise folk.

I think it's superb the vinyl comes with the mp3 download code! I wish all vinyl releases had that.

Posted: Tue Jan 06, 2009 6:13 pm
by datura
I read somewhere that Panda Bear is into Burial, so maybe not so suprising, there's all sort of influences, modern and old, in their music.

Posted: Tue Jan 06, 2009 7:24 pm
by ben freeman
from the 2 leaked tracks I have heard, this album sounds SWEET. I never really liked there old stuff much, except the Panda influenced ambient sounding stuff. Really looking forward to the release.

Posted: Wed Jan 07, 2009 4:32 pm
by staas
this is a good record, listened to it once so far and planning to get in a second go tonight 8)

it's a little samey and starts to lose my attention by halfway, and i'm not sure if it'll be as exciting after i've heard it a hundred times, but whatever.....it's a good record

Posted: Thu Jan 08, 2009 12:45 pm
by chutnut
heard this a few days ago, its got some really good tunes on but the production is horrible imo

Posted: Thu Jan 08, 2009 2:10 pm
by godflesh fiend
chutnut wrote:heard this a few days ago, its got some really good tunes on but the production is horrible imo
I thought the production was fine?

Although things can always be better.

I always hear stuff that I love and think of how it would've sounded if other producers had their way with it.

Out of curiosity chutnut who would you have liked to have produced it????

I myself would've liked Amon Tobin to produce with a pinch of Justin Broadrick, Bill Laswell and Goth Trad. 8)

Posted: Thu Jan 08, 2009 2:24 pm
by chutnut
Godflesh Fiend wrote:
chutnut wrote:heard this a few days ago, its got some really good tunes on but the production is horrible imo
I thought the production was fine?

Although things can always be better.

I always hear stuff that I love and think of how it would've sounded if other producers had their way with it.

Out of curiosity chutnut who would you have liked to have produced it????

I myself would've liked Amon Tobin to produce with a pinch of Justin Broadrick, Bill Laswell and Goth Trad. 8)
i didnt really have anyone in mind that i wanted to produce it, i think the production on their older albums (i havent heard the last few) was good, but this one just sounds really messy and muffled, with too much annoying background noise which i think ruins some of the tunes a bit

Posted: Thu Jan 08, 2009 6:07 pm
by godflesh fiend
Fair enough.

Posted: Thu Jan 08, 2009 6:39 pm
by optimum
I got a Rough Trade mix cd by AC with my copy and 'bad' by kode9 and ld is on it