Summer Hymns
Voice Brother and Sister
[Misra]
Rating: 8.8
Once in a great while, an album actually transforms memories. For whatever reason, these
records tint every thought with their own unique spirit. I was born and raised in New York
City. I've never been farther south than D.C. But when Voice Brother and Sister plays,
I think back to days I spent as a child of seven years, sitting in a rocking chair on the back
porch of my grandma's house in Georgia, spitting watermelon seeds through the gap between my
two front teeth.
Up until now, the majority of Athens, Georgia musicians have been about as far removed from
true "southern music" as a Canadian hip-hop DJ. On Voice Brother and Sister, though,
Summer Hymns fuse the dense pop stylings of fellow Athens musicians the Olivia Tremor Control
with a distinctly southern, banjo-tinged flavor. The result is one of the most accessible
albums to come out of the Athens psychedelic scene in a long time.
Voice Brother and Sister opens with a very Olivia Tremor Control-inspired 48 seconds of
impenetrable sound collage. Thankfully, those few seconds quickly give way to a series of
spectacular country-tinged psychedelic rock tracks. Summer Hymns' music is characterized by
plucky banjo motifs, layered instrumental textures, dramatic dynamics changes, furious
percussion, and singer Zachary Gresham singing schoolyard melodies in his laid-back, vaporous
tone. But what really sets the band apart is their meticulous attention to detail. As
carefully arranged as these songs are, Voice Brother and Sister never feels cold or
calculated. On tracks like "Mr. Brewer (Crackle, Crackle)," and "Stick Your Tail in the Wind,"
gentle banjos, guitars, and xylophones join together in a hazy backyard jam session. You can
almost see the fog coming out of your speakers.
The album's highlight comes with "New Underdressment." The song opens with a simple guitar part
and vocal melody before bluegrass violins and additional vocal tracks slowly penetrate the mix.
The number of individual melodies buried just beneath the song's surface is astounding. A
lesser band could have picked apart each beautifully dense track on the album into about
20 generic psych-pop tunes. But Summer Hymns made a conscious decision not to release a album
until they felt that each song lived up to its full potential, and Voice Brother and
Sister is that much better for it.
-Matt LeMay