Alopecia

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Album Information
EDITOR'S PICK

Total Tracks: 14   Total Length: 44:57

eMusic Review 0

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Garry Mullholland

eMusic Contributor

05.12.08
Wild and catchy kitchen-sink pop from this former cLOUDDEAD rabble-rouser.
2008 | Label: Tomlab / SC Distribution

Why?'s sound is what the General Unclassifiable tag on your MP3 database was made for. Just when you decide that Alopecia — which takes its name from the medical term for hair loss — is basically an underground hip-hop record, it becomes indie rock. Just as you're putting it in an experimental post-rock box, it pops right out with a burst of dreamy psychedelic pop. Lead single "The Hollows," for example, could be any one of contemporary alt-pop's many moments of '80s new wave revival. Except that neither Interpol nor the Killers conjure imagery like, "In Berlin I saw/ Two men fuck in a dark corner of a basketball court/ Just a slight jingle of pocket change/ Pulsing."

The core trio of Yoni Wolf, his drummer/brother Josiah and multi-instrumentalist Doug McDiarmid are here augmented by Fog members Andrew Broder and Mark Erickson. If you're a fan of Yoni's former band, cLOUDDEAD, you'll already be expecting the fourth Why? album to be a gnomic and druggy treat for arty guys with goatees and backpacks. What you might not be expecting is an album full of great pop tunes. Tribal drums, catchy whistling and romantic pianos adorn "Gnashville," while "Fatalist Palmistry" embraces… read more »

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a refreshing and sour album

MCAL

Wordplay, beats, engaging rhythms and mind-grabbing themes; excellent if you like narrative in your music. Sophomoric in parts, but entertaining throughout. This was one of my favourite albums of 2008. PS and it's much easier to get into than CloudDead.

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hmmm

word-ape

I have played the shit out of the first two songs and #10 is OK but I just can't get into the rest of it.

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They Say All Music Guide

Although Why? have often been considered an alternative rap group, and frontman Yoni Wolf a rapper, this is a designation based on their affiliation with avant hip-hop label anticon and the fact that Wolf will alternate his nasally, sung vocals with spoken word pieces, a designation based on the fact that the band is simply rather hard to categorize. Why? are not hip-hop, but they are also much more than indie rock or folk or whatever other genres are thrown at them, staying within those distinctions but also moving forward, looking outward, all while remaining esoterically accessible. This is especially apparent on Alopecia, the band’s third full-length, which, while musically resting comfortably in the experimentally-tinged indie rock realm, explores as many other influences as it can touch without ever overextending its reach. It’s all wonderfully, awkwardly tied together by Wolf’s lyrics — detailed and odd and sometimes all too humanly crude — which find a way to be both extremely intimate and detached, simultaneously. “These Few Presidents” alludes to death, though it’s probably about a break-up (“At your house the smell of our still living human bodies and oven gas”), “Simeon’s Dilemma” is a warped take on a love song (“But I still hear your name in wedding bells/Will I look better or will I look the same rotting in Hell?), and “Good Friday” manages to discuss sex, the Silver Jews, loneliness, and R. Crumb, while beginning with the lines “If you grew up with white boys who only look at black and Puerto Rican porno/Because they want something their dad don’t got, then you know where you’re at.” Wolf often approaches his words from a hip-hop standpoint, concentrating on internal rhyme and enjambment, but his intonation and delivery are pure indie rock. As is the band, who layer keyboards, guitars, and electric and organic percussion into something simultaneously melodic and distant, tuneful and difficult, songs that you want to sing along to but then have trouble enunciating the hook to “The Hollows,” the first single (“This goes out to all my underdone, other-tongued lung-long frontmen/And all us Earth-growths; some planted, some pulled”). But that, in fact, is what makes Alopecia successful: it displays both crypticness and honesty, intellectualism and vulgarity in equal measure, challenging and placating its audience in the same drawn-out, undefined, nasally breath. – Marisa Brown

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