eMusic Review
After Kristín Anna Valtýsdóttir left múm last year, the experimental Icelandic band seemed to end up in the also-ran pile. Their field-day lullabies had lost the downy voice that made them so distinctive, and the public seemed more excited about what Valtýsdóttir's new project might sound like than about the band she'd left behind. They were, after all, three years away from Summer Make Good, which itself had the creaks and wood-block clappings of a dying ship sinking into its last berth. Then Valtýsdóttir and her hubby — resident Animal Collective folk-freak Avey Tare — issued the abortive backwards love paean Pullhair Rubeye — a Narcissian effort at best. Now thankfully, comes múm's fourth album,Go Go Smear the Poison Ivy — a woodsy set that continues the group's move away from the Day-Glo electronics of 2002's Finally We Are No One, deepening and expanding Summer's organic groove.
For those worried about just how múm might sound without Valtýsdóttir, Go Go Smear the Poison Ivy answers with a stripped-back tone and a new concentration on short-form alternapop tracks. The singing is now done by committee, in drooping choirs and duets where it's often hard to pick out just… read more »