Leaning sharply toward the textured soundscapes of Fennesz, this one-off collaboration is a nice addition to the Fishtank series, and all the more poignant after Mark Linkous' untimely passing. Linkous and Fennesz patiently develop the first few tracks, using a sonic vocabulary familiar to those who've previously digested "Endless Summer" or "Vivadixiesubmarinetransmissionplot," but without a lot of evidence of Sparklehorse's easy songcraft at first. The cello drones, static, and electronic burbles of opening track "Music Box Of Snakes" unfold slowly over nine minutes; elegaic, stately, and faltering: a bit-damaged soundtrack worthy of Eno, but distinct in its own disregard of itself. Sounds clash and decay, or emerge in awkward splendor. It passes by rather quickly, for being three times the length of your average radio pop tune.
Linkous' influence is more overt on "Good Night Sweetheart" which could have been an outtake from "Vivadixie...," perhaps one that was left out in the sun, etched in copper and allowed to succumb to verdigris. The simple vocal is repeated under a distressed bed of elongated sounds, submerged and yearning.
"Shai-Hulud" is a quick cataclysm of frantic sounds, disarrayed and perhaps a little consciously arty. "If My Heart" reintroduces Linkous's translucent vocals in a tremulous and delicate song more immediately familiar in temperment to Sparklehorse fans (not unlike "Homecoming Queen"), and "NC Bongo Buddy" introduces some softly industrial sounding electronics into a moody atmosphere piece that untangles itself slowly from phasing drones into a distorted bed of distant, heavily-treated electric guitar.
Both Mark Linkous and Christian Fennesz take a turn at solo guitar pieces, with just the barest of electron damage floating beneath the clear acoustic tones.
The whole affair is a bit like observing the end of a summer's day from the vantage point of a cloud, slowly drifting apart in the deepening light. An expressionistic and sweetly daring tone experiment that may resonate with fans of Fennesz moreso than with the indie singer/songwriter set, "In The Fishtank" sees Linkous striving to evoke both somber and life-affirming moods with a less-familiar, mostly instrumental and highly minimal vocabulary.