The Postal Service
Give Up
[Sub Pop; 2003]
Rating: 8.0
To tell you the truth, it never even occurred to me.
Sure, there were the countless nights spent listening only to "(This Is) The Dream of Evan and Chan", the
apparent one-off collaboration between Death Cab for Cutie's Ben Gibbard and Jimmy Tamborello (aka Dntel)
that served as a brilliant centerpiece for Tamborello's Life Is Full of Possibilities. And there
were my frequent, semi-coherent rants about how "Evan and Chan" was not only one of the best songs of
2001, but perhaps the perfect synthesis of IDM production and indie pop songwriting. But the thought
of further collaboration between Tamborello and Gibbard never crossed my mind. When I heard last year
that they were collaborating on another single, I shit a brick. And when it was later revealed that the
single had evolved into a full-length album, I practically shit a whole firehouse.
So, first the bad news: Give Up doesn't offer 45 solid minutes of the same wholesale brilliance that
appeared in condensed form on "(This Is) The Dream of Evan and Chan". If anything, the occasional missteps
here serve to elucidate what exactly made the first collaboration between Tamborello and Gibbard so effective.
Still, the core tension between Tamborello's complex, almost impossibly dense production and Gibbard's
cutting voice makes Give Up a pretty damned strong record, and one with enough transcendent moments
to forgive it its few substandard tracks and some ungodly lyrical blunders.
Tamborello and Gibbard put their best foot forward with "The District Sleeps Alone Tonight", in which
Gibbard's vocal melody and Tamborello's instrumentation build independently to a perfectly orchestrated
emotional climax, replete with hiss-laden sampled strings and ethereal background vocals, making use of
the two best elements of this entire collaboration: contrast and subtlety. There's a noticeable clash
between Gibbard's emotive singing and the upbeat drum machine line that drives the track's second half,
but Tamborello's production is loaded with enough warm, melodic instrumentation to provide a surprisingly
apt background for Gibbard's sincere tenor.
Furthermore, "The District Sleeps Alone Tonight" benefits from being one of the lyrically stronger tracks on
Give Up. "Such Great Heights", the album's single, is host to the album's strongest melody, but its
lyrical parallels to N'Sync's "God Must Have Spent a Little More Time on You" make it just a bit hard to
swallow. It hurts me to hear the words, "I am thinking it's a sign/ That the freckles in our eyes are mirror
images/ And when we kiss they're perfectly aligned," sung to such a unique, riveting melody. Of course, the
song is a fine work of literature compared to "Sleeping In", which can lay claim to the record's most
thoroughly cringe-worthy lines: "Last night I had the strangest dream/ Where everything was exactly how it
seemed/ Where there was never any mystery/ About who shot John F. Kennedy." I realize there were probably
some time constraints, but the vivid and intriguing lyrics of "Evan and Chan" proved Gibbard capable of
much, much better than, "I want so badly to believe/ That there is truth and love is real."
Still, this album overcomes its highly questionable lyrical choices, and its sometimes painful duets between
Gibbard and indie folkster Jen Wood, purely on the strength of Gibbard's consistently strong melodies,
which carry far greater impact in the context of Tamborello's hyperactive electro-pop than they have on
recent Death Cab for Cutie releases. And Tamborello's contributions give the intricate precision of
Life Is Full of Possibilities a Caffeinated overhaul, forsaking the time-honored glitch for bright,
danceable beats. So it may be impressive that these songs come as the result of the dreaded Collaboration-By-Mail,
but given the immense chemistry shared by these two musicians, it's anything but surprising.
-Matt LeMay, February 10th, 2003