U.S. EZ

Rate It! Avg: 4.0 (78 ratings)
U.S. EZ album cover
Album Information
EDITOR'S PICK

Total Tracks: 14   Total Length: 28:52

eMusic Review 0

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Mike McGonigal

eMusic Contributor

Mike McGonigal is editorial director for YETI publishing and the author of three little music books. He lives in Portland, OR, where he spends his time assembli...more »

07.14.08
It takes a lot of work to sound this trashy: the Sic Alps have perfected the art of stumbling into musical splendor.
Label: Siltbreeze / Revolver

Sic Alps 'third album (their debut for the mightily revitalized Siltbreeze label) is a strange, beguiling and beautiful thing. The Sic Alps are a San Francisco-based duo comprised of Mike Donovan and Matthew Hartman, both veterans of Cat Power, Coachwhips, Total Shutdown and a couple half-forgotten Slumberland indie pop acts. Among the dozens of bands lumped in with the "new lo-fi" scene, Sic Alps seem the most instantly beloved by the widest swath of nerds: punks, record collectors, indie-pop kids and noise hounds alike. Rock has always had a fetish for the "well-crafted illusion of spontaneity," as Paul Lukas once called it. Sic Alps pull off that very trick, seeming to shamble about aimlessly, then suddenly hit upon bits of musical splendor with uncanny perfection. To put it another way: it takes a lot of work to sound this trashy.

Like their Bay Area compatriots Wooden Shjips, the Alps invest potentially alienating sounds with a truckload of good vibrations. The shortness of most Alps tunes helps to make them easily digested as pop music; even their most "out" material has a chewy melodic center. When they surface from the haze to bust out with straight-ahead… read more »

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something old is new again....not really

upsidedowndj

talented young San francisco locals sic alps are right on track these days in the bay area music sceen. like fellow noise rockers "wooden shjips" and "thee oh sees" retro garage bands are poping up more and more. some good some not so good. i have to give credit to E-music for having this album available. one of the few example's of modern psych/garage the bay area has to offer. if you love that dirty lo-fi rock sound. here you have it. solid record. nothing new here. but solid.

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Sometimes we all need a little noise

visionsofjohanna

At its best, this album uses the dissonance lo-fi exudes as a natural extension of their sound without it overpowering some truly beautiful harmony. The fuzz isn't some forced technique used to get away with sounding smart, instead it really sounds like two guys in a basement who decided to press play. Still, there are some hits and misses in this album and probably nobody would fault you for just getting the brilliant "Everywhere, there". Its just too bad the 2 minute song is a medium which bleeds the emusic fan dry.

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Other Reviewers Don't Understand

LittleRage

The Sic Alps are a fantastic band; if the samples sound bad, so will the album. This isn't major label slicked-out studio shit but honest lo-fi psych-garage. See them live if you can!

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I Doubt those reviewers ownloae the songs

mikemos

I Doubt those reviewers downloaded the songs. I didn't either but I won't give a starred review. From the samples I listened to it sounds like a goo album. It's not what I'm listening to this month but I used to love stuff like this. Think Sebadoh III with more funk and more instruments.

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Great Lo-Fi Pop

viker

Despite previous 'reviews', this is an excellent lo-fi/noise pop album and I'm glad to see that editors are able to award praise to albums that deserve it even if they may not be on the most well known labels (even on 'indie' levels). Siltbreeze is such a great label and I'm so happy that the folks at eMusic were able to get them on board.

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Scratching my head...

boomshanker

Sometimes I simply cannot comprehend how albums such as this manage to capture an Editor's pick. It boggles my mind. One star is far too kind...

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Astonishing

permafrost154

Astonishingly bad in almost every way possible. If you enjoy this record, please promise that you will never have children.RESUBMITTED: The above review was astonishingly ignorant in almost every way possible... The reviewer promises to lay off the reposado asshole juice. Resume procreation because this band is better than we'll ever be.

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They Say All Music Guide

Noisily experimental San Francisco duo Sic Alps graduate to the comparatively mainstream Siltbreeze label for their fifth album, and the album title is not as ironic as those who have heard its predecessors might think: it’s not exactly easy listening, but this is by some distance the most immediately accessible album Sic Alps have so far released. There are still a few blurts of aimless, skronky noise (“N# #JJ” is a duet for random drumkit and amplifier abuse, and “Bric Jaz (Reprise)” is merely 13 seconds’ worth of backwards tape), but otherwise, almost all of these 14 songs have actual musical structure. “Mater” and “Inventing a Common Rule” even have harmony vocals, and they’re in tune yet! The familiar cracker-box production and hissy lo-fi sound are still in place, but underneath that, U.S. EZ has moments of actual pop suss, such as the tense, whispered closer “Quai des Orfevres,” the hazy folk-rock of “Sing Song Waitress,” and the good-natured choogle of “Jelly Roll Gum Drop” (not the Zappa tune). Another album or so on this level and Sic Alps will be primed for a breakthrough à la Guided by Voices circa Propeller. – Stewart Mason

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