Notes From Life On The Wire With A Wrecking Ball

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Album Information

Total Tracks: 12   Total Length: 41:11

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philip sherburne

eMusic Contributor

Electronic music columnist for eMusic.com; writer for fishwrap like The Wire, XLR8R, SF Weekly, RES, Nylon, and Wired; columnist for Pitchfork; blogger (www.phi...more »

09.08.08
Musical magpie stitches shiny baubles into his own singular creations
2008 | Label: Faith and Industry / Southern Record Distributors

Capitol K's patched-together sound has always borne certain similarities to the sample-heavy collages of Four Tet and Caribou. Fittingly (and refreshingly), just as those producers have turned their early signatures into something far more eccentric, Capitol K's first album since 2005's Nomad Junk is his strangest yet — and also, possibly, his most rewarding. His music still balances a magpie-like attraction to sampled sonic baubles with original parts recorded in the studio; he's still folding dozens of borrowings from diverse musical vernaculars into a warm, well-insulated sound that's undeniably his. The tracks and titles show both a curious literalism and an impish counterintuiveness: "Go Go Go" has all the boundless energy promised by the title, but it's also remarkably restrained, sounding a bit like an early Cure song played on a Casiotone that's lodged beneath the sofa cushions. "Acid Favela" is just that, a big fat horn riff and drum break cribbed from Brazilian funk carioca and wedded to a gurgling acid bass line — until the bridge, when a glistening rock break genuflects before U2, seemingly without irony. As for "Bomb Bomb," imagine the chorus "Bomb bomb, ricking bomb" sung to the tune of one of … read more »

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