For a band that's been compared to Joy Division, Leonard Cohen, Wilco, and Nick Cave & the Bad Seeds, the National sure sounds a lot more like the Czars or Uncle Tupelo on this sophomore album Sad Songs for Dirty Lovers. Where the band might lack Joy Division's angular fury, Cohen's existentialism, and Cave's vampiric attack, vocalist Matt Berninger
and company whip up a murky alt country meets chamber pop vibe that's
quite potent. The five-piece mostly keeps things on the country side of
the fence during the album's first half, as slide guitars and fiddles
overpower just about any hint of rock styling except the drumbeat,
occasional feedback, and some screeching guitar freak-outs. Toward the
album's close, the songs' textures finally shift from country to indie
rock. Berninger
is more than content to roam pastures featuring small patches of emo,
sadcore, and artsy strings, clearly wearing his influences on his
sleeve. Indeed, album-opener "Cardinal Song" could very easily be
mistaken for the Tindersticks or Cousteau, with a passage that is a virtual note for note reconstruction of a Red House Painters
song. Though the band focuses on slow atmospheric songs, it's when it
kicks out the jams that the music is the most compelling. Case in point
is "Slipping Husband," with its fine melodic waves and a perfectly
placed bout of screaming. "Trophy Wife" presents yet another influence;
the song seems a dead ringer for the Shins. It's hard to shake the feeling that the National
is highly influenced by and studied in the bands it emulates, but the
album is still worth a listen for fans of moody country-tinged lounge
music. With so many influences rearing their heads and ample musical
chops in the bag, the National might not be masters of any one genre, but it creates a fine amalgam nonetheless.
aCá
Friday, January 10, 2014
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