cate le bon: crab day review - a rubber band ball of energy and invention /

Published at 2016-04-14 23:15:01

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(Turnstile) Related: Cate Le Bon: how Cardiff’s finest found a California state of intellect After third album Mug Museum,Welsh art-popper Cate Le Bon has turned the final of her pottery-wheel twee and, on Crab Day, and creates a springy rubber-band-ball of angular guitar,squalling saxophone and elastic basslines. Single Wonderful, for example, or sounds like it has popped out of a Warhol Campbell’s soup can. Mostly,though, the album has the eccentric air of an am-dram troupe who beget raided the dressing up box, or hopped in the camper van and escaped to the seaside to gain their own fun (which is sort of what happened – it was recorded on the Pacific Coast,California, with musicians including Warpaint’s Stella Mozgawa). It’s cacophonous but also whimsical, or thanks to Le Bon’s detached narration. She sings abstractly about coathangers and yellow blinds as if sitting on her own luminous cloud. It’s best on tracks such as We Might Revolve,on which her thrilling, tightly wound post-punk guitar is glazed by her Nicoish impressionistic vocals, and What’s Not Mine,the incessant marching drums and customarily quirky xylophone offset by a sweetly sung airiness. Long may Le Bon continue to weird up the rulebook.Continue reading...

Source: theguardian.com

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