Event Details
Date: Wednesday, August 01, 2012
Start Time: 8:00 PM
Event Type: Concerts, Special Events
Last Updated: July 23, 2012
Views: 15
Tune Yardsw h o k i l l, the sophomore album by Merrill Garbus tUnE-yArDs, is a thrill for fans of the live show that left most stunned in 2010. No longer is her artful songwriting and soulful voice obscured by digital fuzz as it often was on her solo debut, BiRd-BrAiNs. Transplanting herself from Montreal to sunny Oakland, California, while touring almost non-stop for over two years, Merrill has stripped tUnE-yArDs away to a more precise, concentrated and vivid sound. w h o k i l l retains the honesty of the lonely bedroom confessional characteristic of her early work, but with the addition of the fangs, claws and dented metal of its new surroundings.When the homespun cocktail BiRd-BrAiNs was released in the summer of 2009, tUnE-yArDs introduced their way of converting basic beats (A snare crack! A stick clack!), deceptively simple vocal loops and a few instruments into a pocket orchestra. With w h o k i l l, the band has expanded that miniature ensemble into a celebration of quadroaudiophonicnessosity.As before, tUnE-yArDs grounds its sound in tangible, instantly gratifying techniques. Neither digital magic trickery nor auto-tuned dazzle need be applied; tUnE-yArDsmusic is made by human hands and possessed of a distinctly human touch. This is music created piecemeal, smashed apart wholly, then reassembled tenderly, gaining complexity as the layers stack up.Applying the tUnE-yArDs live approach to her studio work for the first time in w h o k i l l, her tools have not changed. Rather, shes added more buttons and joints to those already being used one essential new joint is dexterous bass member Nate Brenner, who co-wrote a few songs. The opportunities exploited are evident in w h o k i l ls dynamic range, as it matches Garbus creative strides. Theres no substitute for a good microphone, and the sonic nuances that can only be achieved through masterful recording techniques producer Garbus and engineer Eli Crews are to be thanked can be heard in each drumbeat and vocal line. Take Powa, a song whose immense, undulating strength emanates from little more than a repeating ukulele line, artfully-placed bass and percussive backbeat, complimented by Garbus soaring and melodic vocal delivery.And can we take a second to thank the good Lord above for giving us a voice like Garbus? From a croon to a shriek to a rap to a hum, the vocal gymnastics of tUnE-yArDs songs remain front and center. Now, add a beat, one full of soul and swing and wonderful imperfection. That voice infiltrates your mind, shoots down your legs and converts any ground into a dance floor. Bizness takes this approach to the extreme, starting with the sung imitation of a xylophone roll, then building in a raucous style until the searing and commanding chorus takes control.