Moment Bends

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Moment Bends album cover
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Total Tracks: 11   Total Length: 40:18

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Laura Leebove

Production Editor

Laura Leebove is a Brooklyn-based music journalist whose writing has appeared in various publications including Billboard, Spinner.com, Venus Zine, Critical Mob...more »

04.20.11
Finally singing at the top of their lungs
2011 | Label: V2 / Cooperative Music USA / Downtown Records

On their 2003 debut Fingers Crossed, the Aussies of Architecture in Helsinki introduced themselves as a twee indiepop group with a foundation of glockenspiels and synths, horns and winds, fronted by wispy vocalists Cameron Bird and Kellie Sutherland, who sing lines like "Imaginary, ordinary, it's you that I belong with." Many of their early songs were pleasant, meek and unobtrusive — pithy but polite instrumental interludes best fit for an indie-film soundtrack, perhaps even played on toy instruments. With every album they've grown a bit more muscle, most notably with 2007's Places Like This, where tropical percussion was at the forefront. On their fourth LP Moment Bends, the band members are at their most powerful — singing at the top of their lungs and practically begging you to get on the dance floor.

Opener "Escapee" starts with a repeated piano pattern and builds gradually, adding percussive synths, clean reverbed guitar and, finally, meaty synths — no glockenspiel, flutes or clarinets to be found. Centerpiece "That Beep" is a blast, while disco-leaning jams "Everything's Blue" and "I Know Deep Down" channel the likes of Passion Pit or Hercules & Love Affair. Euphoric standout "Contact High" finds Bird singing in a falsetto… read more »

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dying

pyxis

I get the impression that these guys were dying to incorporate the intellectual-sounding words architecture with the name of somewhere European-hip sounding that hasn't been cut and pasted into an indie(tard - thanks, Ernie) band name as of yet. "Helsinki sounds smart, right? And it's fun to say!" After that long journey, at some point they must've decided they're going to have to record some music as filler to carry their hip band name onward. That's just my impression.

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better

ernie-c

than before. shut up indie tards!

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They Say All Music Guide

It took Architecture in Helsinki a while to follow up Places Like This, which they had recorded with founder Cameron Bird in Brooklyn and the rest of the group scattered across the globe. All the bandmembers reconvened in Australia to make Moment Bends, and it’s hard not to think that this is a large part of why they sound much more focused than they did before. The 2008 single “That Beep” — which they recorded during the two years they holed up in their studio, Buckingham Palace, making this album — suggested that Architecture in Helsinki were back to their usual bouncy and irrepressible selves with a veneer of sleek synth pop. Moment Bends makes good on the single’s promise, with Architecture in Helsinki moving forward by looking back — not only to their own skills with hooks and melodies, but to ‘80s synth pop too. “Desert Island” captures the album’s feel, its artificial tropical paradise coming across like a strange but appealing hybrid of Wham! and Matthew Wilder’s “Break My Stride.” It also features some of Bird’s finest singing to date, falling somewhere in between his earlier wispy vocals and his forced throatiness on Places Like This. Indeed, much of Moment Bends finds the band discovering a happy medium between its old and new sounds, as on “Everything’s Blue,” which tempers Places Like This’ attempts at funk with a fresher and more natural approach. Architecture in Helsinki don’t so much borrow from the ‘80s as they embody them, whether on “Denial Style”’s Paisley Park pop or “Contact High” and “Sleep Talkin”’s lightly soulful, Culture Club-like approach. At times, the pristine sonics overwhelm the actual songs, and the lone ballad “B4 3D” closes the album on a slightly anticlimactic note, but overall Moment Bends is a return to form, if not quite as inspired as Architecture in Helsinki’s best moments. – Heather Phares

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