Taiga

Rate It! Avg: 4.0 (90 ratings)
ALBUM INFORMATION
EDITOR'S PICK

Total Tracks: 8   Total Length: 57:43

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OOIOOMG

jakedrakespam

This album has just about blown me away. From the polarized reviews I imagined it would be Boredoms-like noise chaos but OOIOO is much more together than that. There is a lot of intention here with a healthy amount of prog and jazz influence yet still retaining that infectiously zany Japanese energy that defined the Bs. I love the jungle rhythms, the silly hoots, the vocal experimentation, the well done drone-aspect, the funk/prog/jazz/world influences, everything. Great great album and if Green & Gold is 3/4 the work that Taiga is I'm gonna be looking at a new staple band, personally.

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what kind of element are we suppose to be in??

Irk

this crap blows. this is what it would sound like if the members of animal collective didn't know a tripe thing about music and didn't know how to play a single instrument. this might sound ok if you were high. maybe that explains the five star reviews...

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Typically awesome oh-oh-eye-oh-oh

TheQuickBrownFox

Intricate rythms, lots of sounds I've genuinely never heard before. Technically brilliant fantasy music. Not as good as Green and Gold. :)

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Ouch

Dudeman

It gave me an earache!

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They Say All Media Guide

In Japanese, Taiga means “big river”; in Russian, it’s “forest.” Both are apt descriptions for the dense, winding, jungle-like music OOIOO craft on this, their fifth album. Not to push the connection too much, but Taiga’s multilingual meanings could also allude to the band’s magpie-like ability to pick the most vital, interesting sounds from other cultures and fashion them into what feels like world music from an alternate universe. Despite the Japanese and Russian meanings of “taiga,” the most prominent influence on Taiga comes from Africa: dense African jazz and lilting African folk-inspired guitar melodies play large roles on most of the album’s tracks. In particular, the vibrant “KMS,” which makes nine minutes feel like the blink of an eye (well, maybe two blinks) incorporates these elements brilliantly. Building from hand drums, guitars, and a rubbery bassline, the track shifts to jazzy rhythms and picks up steam as it goes along, adding forceful singing and brass on the way. By the time it closes with an insistent guitar riff that weirdly echoes “Pictures of Matchstick Men,” OOIOO make three very different-sounding stretches of music sound perfectly natural together. “SAI” is another standout, a 15-minute epic with a loping beat; hypnotic, slowly turning organ; and flute melodies and vocals that sound like wild birds. Elsewhere, the band fuses gamelan and psych-rock (“ATS”) and calypso with drum rolls straight out of the big top (“GRS”). As always, Yoshimi P We’s drumming is so vivid it’s almost visible, especially on Taiga’s opening salvo, “UMA.” She plays cat-and-mouse with the rhythm (perhaps it’s not coincidental that the album’s name also sounds like “tiger”), rolling and batting it around before pouncing down with a satisfying crash that makes the track’s chanted vocals sound even more feral. Most importantly, the album is a beautiful demonstration of how OOIOO keep changing and innovating without losing touch with what made them distinctive in the first place. Their inspired, eclectic mix of sounds and textures is always playful, but Taiga’s powerful playing and sophisticated arrangements make it OOIOO’s most mature album yet. – Heather Phares

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