eMusic Review 0
Billed as a sequel to last year's The Stage Names, the sixth record from Okkervil River, isn't so much a continuation as it is a further rumination on similar themes. Like its predecessor, The Stand-Ins is concerned with the travails of "some mid-level band," but where the protagonists in The Stage Names seemed to stumble dumbly and naively through their misfortunes ("A Girl in Port," in particular, bore the sting of regret), here the characters are harder and crueler and more calculated.
The villains enter early: "Singer Songwriter" is a dead-on evisceration of the kind of privileged folkie that affects penniless bohemianism for the sake of image. Will Sheff's lyrics, which in the past had a tendency to sacrifice clarity for poetry, are agonizingly precise here: "I heard cuts by the Kinks on your speakers," he sneers, "I saw Poe and Artaud on your shelves/ While The Last Laugh's first scene/ On your flat-panel screen/ Lit Chanel that you wrapped 'round yourself." It's blistering and brutal, a 21st-century take on "Positively 4th Street." That the music is a spot-on evocation of Bringin 'It All Back Home doesn't hurt. In fact, The Stand-Ins is best when it's buoyant: "Calling and… read more »