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16 of 18 people found the following review helpful:
A vibrant canvas of textures and rhythms., 25 Feb 2006
Despite what some fans and critics have said, I believe that 'Feels' is an album that more than lives up to its predecessor, the excellent Sung Tongs. The sound here is more expansive and seems a lot freer in its approach, with the emphasis placed on the performance and the seemingly improvised bursts of noise and other such random instrumental touches. At the same time, however, the pop influences shine through, and the album as a whole is a great deal of fun... that is, if you can put aside the bones of scepticism, or the paranoid NME style pigeonholing!!To be fair, describing the overall sound of the Animal Collective can be a daunting and impossible task. Thus far, they've changed their style considerably from one album to the next, incorporating a number of disparate musical influences, whilst simultaneously striving throughout to fuse traditional pop rhythms and melodies, alongside more experimental song structures and arrangements!! Understandably then, 'Feels' is - for the lack a better word - a trippy album, one that taps into the ethos of the 60's hippie scene and injects it with a contemporary dose of irony (not that the Collective are winking at the audience in an Apples In Stereo stylee or anything, but rather, the use of instrumentation, especially when coupled with the production and that lovely cover art, seem to strive to evoke the free-form excess and the mind-expanding exploration at the heart of the nu-folk and 60's psychedelic genres). This puts them in the same sphere as the Brian Jonestown Massacre, as well as the other two bands of the aforementioned Elephant 6, The Olivia Tremor Control and the mighty Neutral Milk Hotel. Further reference points can be found within the scene that the Animal Collective have helped to create, with the band's music showing similarities to other acid-folk luminaries like Devendra Banhart, Sufjan Stevens, Tunng, Vetiver, the Arcade Fire and the too-brilliant-for-words Joanna Newsom. Added to this, we also have the retro-influence of acts like Pink Floyd (particularly the early Sid Barrett stuff), Robert Wyatt, the Incredible String Band, Blonde on Blonde era Dylan, mid period Donovan and that perennial nu-folk luminary Vashti Bunyan (who the Collective collaborated with on their great Prospect Hummer EP from 2004, as well as Bunyan's 2005 come-back album, Lookaftering). If any (or all?) of those acts float your musical boat (so to speak!), then it's safe to say that 'Feels' is the one for you, with the album getting off to a great start with Did You See the Words, which sounds to me like a schizophrenic take on the Arcade Fire's über-hit single The Power Out, with a clamour of percussion, over-lapping vocals, exotic textures and a floating feeling of psychedelic excess. The rest of the album follows a similar path, with the songs deviating in tempo only (some songs sounding slow and minimal - like Flesh Canoe, with its dreamy underwater feeling of drifting and disorientating animal calls, and Bees, with it's vast silences broken only by the scratchy instrumentation and the layers of droning vocals - whilst other tracks, such as the standout number Grass and the aforementioned opener, have a robust sound made up of layers of diverse and bizarre instrumentation and more pronounced pop rhythms and melodies). That said, the songs rarely stick to one set trajectory, often surging off in strange and intoxicating directions, incorporating all manner of influences, instruments, sound samples, voices, noises, bells and whistles, whilst creating a strange and hypnotic feeling that seems to strive to create the sense of intoxication, under the weight of heavy hallucinogenics!!! Further reference points on the album lean towards the post rock of bands like Godspeed! You Black Emperor, Dirty Three, Cocteau Twins and, in particular, Sigur Ròs, with the escalating and propulsive structure of songs like Banshee Beat and Loch Raven recalling the escalating rhythms and tempos of their 2005 effort, Takk. There are also elements of that much acclaimed XTC album Skylarking, with Feels possessing a similarly pastoral sound with the emphasis on nature, animals and human behaviour, alongside bizarre production effects, exotic instruments, and overlapping vocals (you could probably draw parallels to the mid-80's Talking Heads sound too... that is, if you really wanted to!!). Regardless, Feels retains its individuality, and was really the best step to take following the exceptional Sung Tongs. Here, the Collective manage to advance on their sound in a way that opens them up to new ideas and interpretations, yet at the same time, manages to retain the key Animal Collective sound that has been developing nicely though the previous albums Here Comes the Indian and the classic mighty Sung Tongs. Feels is an album that manages to take on board well worm "retro" influences, and blur them with a sound of their own, creating a bright, vibrant, strange and colourful collection of pastoral psychedelic pop songs that more than measure up to the music of their heroes and associates.
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