eMusic Review 0
On the first few songs their fourth album, this drowsily melodic California country foursome focus on wonders of natural science like no band since Fruit Bats eulogized mammoths and dodos on their obscure 2001 collection Echolocation. Opener “Carbon Dated Love” is recited from the point of view of a paleontologist mooning over his favorite fossil fern; then the next song combines mentions of bears and buffalos with some weird wah-wah; then there's one where the botanists battle the astrophysicists.
The record gets more diffuse from there, though tracks like the backyard-teepee tale “Ever Since the Grid Went Down” and the high school ecology club ode “Environmental Children of the Future” partake in an existentially green ethos that the Holy Modal Rounders, say, might find humor in.
Rob Waller's sturdy baritone can get monotonous, but also approaches a sort of Gordon Lightfoot gravity in its lowest register; when the rhythm encompasses Celtic sea-chantey or Tex-Mex clippity-clop or fiddle jigging or Blonde on Blonde boogie, he holds his own. And even when the supposedly “psychedelic” tunes turn sleepy, which is at least half the time, it's the kind of sleepiness that conjures bed-rolls on the bare desert ground.