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Cover Art Elf Power
The Winter is Coming
[Elephant 6/Arena Rock]
Rating: 6.9

What makes a good band name? It all depends on who you ask. But as far as I'm concerned, there seem to be four categories of band names that can make a group significantly more likable. And here they are:

Category #1: Band names that are simply cool-sounding. Examples: Q & Not U, Les Savy Fav, Aphex Twin.

Category #2: Bands names that alter seemingly innocuous phrases, names, or objects. Examples: The Texas Instruments, John Cougar Concentration Camp.

Category #3: Bands whose titles are stunningly evocative of their music. Examples: Low, Summer Hymns, Flying Saucer Attack.

Category #4: Bands that invert the technique used by those who fall into the third category, choosing a name that seems so opposed to the nature their music that it drips with delicious irony. Examples: The Pixies, Cap'n Jazz, Massive Attack.

Elf Power should have thought twice before deciding on what to call themselves. Three times, even. Judging from the band's name, and an analysis of the above categories, one could most likely expect from Elf Power either cloying twee-pop, or sloppy, angry punk rock. The Winter is Coming is neither. It's a fairly well-executed, if painfully uneven, romp through that ubiquitous Elephant 6 fuzz-pop sound we all know and love.

On second thought, scratch the "love" part. Everyday, the "trademark" Elephant 6 sound loses another fan, and rightfully so. Most of the great Elephant 6 records on record store shelves-- most notably Neutral Milk Hotel's In the Aeroplane Over the Sea and the Olivia Tremor Control's Black Foliage-- were not fuzzy, lo-fi pop records, but rather, unique, cohesive albums that operated outside of the defined "Elephant 6" sound. The one real exception to this rule is the Olivias' Dusk at Cubist Castle, the epitome of the E6 sound, and arguably the best album bearing the collective's seal of approval.

The Winter is Coming kicks off with an ambiguous drone and a driving marching band rhythm. A reverb-drenched guitar, mimicked by Andrew Rieger's dreamy vocals, play a riff lifted off Hendrix's "Third Stone from the Sun." Eventually, the track builds to a powerful climax of horns, guitars, and strings. It's followed by "Skeleton," perhaps the archetypal Elephant 6 fuzzy pop song, with somewhere between three and six chords, a straightforward beat, and lo-to-mid-fi production value.

So up until the third track, it's all good. Sure, it's not ground-breaking by any stretch of the imagination, but the level of rock power applied to the first two tracks give Elf Power an edge other Elephant 6 songs generally lack. Unfortunately, "The Great Society" plays off that old standby of E6 production: the Phil Spector wall of sound. And in doing so, it disrupts the record's flow with a blast of cheeseball fluff. The record does recover relatively well from this lapse in judgment, though, with the trance-inducing "Wings of Light" and the "Don't Fear the Reaper"-esque "The Sun is Forever." Here, the album takes on glossier production, but thanks to the nature of Rieger's songwriting, it remains true to the rest of the album's sound.

So, yeah, The Winter is Coming is relatively consistent. The closer, "The Albatross," is a powerful rock ballad that serves as a convincing ending to a record that may leave you needing a bit of convincing. Though it's certainly not a bad album, one can't help but feel that parts of it are a bit too predictable, borrowing excessively not only from outside sources, but from other songs on the record as well. So perhaps it's not the band, but the album in question that lays claim to the ironic title: The Winter is Coming is the most promising Elf Power release to date.

-Matt LeMay



Friday, December 1st, 2000
Blur:
The Best of Blur

Gas:
Pop

Unwound:
A Single History 1991-1997

Hate Department:
Technical Difficulties



Friday, December 1st, 2000
  • Palace Records to team with Drag City for new releases
  • New old David Grubbs music to be released next year
  • Japancakes prepare to hoist new LP on unsuspecting public



    Interview: David Grubbs
    by Matt LeMay
    David Grubbs discusses the recording of his latest album, The Spectrum Between, as well as meeting up with Swedish reedist Mats Gustafsson, teaching at the University of Chicago, and what he holds against expensive guitars...



    6ths
    At the Drive In
    Badly Drawn Boy
    Bonnie Billy & Marquis de Tren
    Björk
    Johnny Cash
    Clinic
    Damon & Naomi with Ghost
    Death Cab for Cutie
    Dismemberment Plan
    Don Caballero
    Eleventh Dream Day
    Elf Power
    Eternals
    For Carnation
    Godspeed You Black Emperor!
    Kim Gordon/Ikue Mori/DJ Olive
    Guided by Voices
    High Llamas
    Ida
    Jets to Brazil
    Joan of Arc
    Karate
    Talib Kweli & Hi-Tek
    Les Savy Fav
    J Mascis and the Fog
    Microphones
    Modest Mouse
    Mojave 3
    Rian Murphy & Will Oldham
    Oasis
    Olivia Tremor Control
    Pizzicato Five
    Q and Not U
    Radiohead
    Sea and Cake
    Shellac
    Sigur Rós
    Smashing Pumpkins
    Spoon
    Summer Hymns
    Amon Tobin
    Trans Am
    U2
    Versus
    Yo La Tengo

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