Mouse on Mars
Idiology
[Thrill Jockey]
Rating: 9.6
There's a stereotype that people who like to write about music eventually
become jaded. After years of sawing through one stack of promo records after
another, the thinking goes, critics develop a love/hate relationship with the
medium and begin to think of listening as drudgery. Adding some credence to
this idea is the undeniable fact that music writers are so often confronted
with music they find less than inspiring.
I don't think this has happened to me personally. I'm more excited with
exploring new sounds than ever, and I'm always impressed with how much
truly great stuff is out there. I will say, though, that I rarely find a
record that completely devastates me. After spending so much time listening,
thinking and comparing different sounds, sometimes I think the language of
music has a smaller vocabulary than I once imagined. If it's true that
anything is possible in art, it's equally true that 99% of the people making
it couldn't give a toss; they're perfectly content to find a way to express
themselves by building directly on the past. And there's not a thing wrong
with that. Innovation, after all, is not the same thing as quality.
Every once a while, though, I hear a record that has a truckload of both these
qualities, and I get that coveted "blown away" feeling. The Boredoms' Super
Ae was one such record, and Mouse on Mars' Idiology is another.
Just about everything I love about music these days is on this album somewhere,
and it has made me so very happy.
The key word when Jan St Werner and Andi Toma sat down to make this record
was "more." More melody, more instruments, more singing, more sounds and more
noise. Almost half the eleven songs feature vocals of some kind, all of them
sung by the band's versatile drummer Dodo Nkishi. These range from the
hyper-processed "Actionist Respoke," with its oddly funny, high-pitched
screams, to the dense, layered harmonies of "Presence," where Nkishi channels
the fragile harmonies of Yes.
Strings and horns are all over Idiology, and throughout I'm astonished
at the odd and beautiful ways Mouse on Mars combine traditional orchestration
with electronics. "Subsequence," for example, opens with a tough, funky digital
groove that reminds me of what I imagined Prince's mythical Black Album
sounded like before I'd heard it. And then, just a little over a minute in,
an acoustic grand piano joins the fray, playing chords that, I swear, seem
lifted from Gershwin's "Rhapsody in Blue." The first time I heard it, I did a
doubletake and then realized how rarely I feel genuinely surprised by
a piece of music. My admiration only grew as clarinets, violins and French
horns folded into the charming and rhythmically irresistible track.
Even more left-field for Mouse on Mars is "Presence." I've heard others
compare it to Robert Wyatt, but my prog background is more limited, so let's
just agree that it sounds like a song from a time when bearded men were
interested in expanding the boundaries of rock. Those hoping for a more
contemporary reference point might consider Gastr del Sol. Like the best
tracks on Camoufleur, "Presence" is baroque pop, thick with virtuosic
electronic detail. From the angelic but not-quite-catchy melody, to the words
(which seem to be about either the phenomenology of being or Led Zeppelin's
seventh album), to the folky, horn-drenched coda, "Presence" is dense enough
to dissect over the course of a hundred listens.
I love fact that Idiology can contain both the nouveau prog of "Presence"
and "Doit," which is industrial reggae as played by Tom Waits' Rain Dogs
band, complete with pedal steel guitar. More than any other song here, "Doit"
shows that Mouse on Mars can write interesting lyrics when so inclined:
And the ship up there that wants to leave
Filled up to the brim with children
Hangs a little while, but the string
Is wearing -- silently
I love the tension in these words. What's going to happen when that string
gives way?
If the additions are what make this record distinctive, what's left out is
what makes it brilliant. The brief "Paradical," probably my favorite track
here, illustrates the point. It starts with two chords that sound played on
an out-of-tune piano with ball-peen hammers. A strange and lovely melody in
an Eastern scale enters, first on synthesizer, then on subtly building
strings. Finally, as the small orchestra completely overtakes the track and
the beautiful melody is fully unveiled, the song disappears. Like this
49-minute album, "Paradical" is over much too quickly. But desire is more
interesting than satiation, which is why God invented the repeat button.
-Mark Richard-San