Caribou
Swim
Review Date: 21 April 2010
The first Caribou record since the Polaris Prize-winning 'Andorra' is a fine blend of indie, electronica and creeping psychedelia. Think a more experimental Royksopp meets a less-commercial Hot Chip.
Several years ago, Canada was seen as the hub of the indie universe, spawning world-beating acts like Arcade Fire, but also cultivating a diverse electronica scene that bubbled under and creeped onto the international radar. These days, it seems to have been usurped by the uber-trendy Brooklyn scene, but there are still some quality acts pouring from the land of maple syrup and sustaining its reputation as a musical nucleus.
One of them is Daniel V. Snaith, no newcomer to either the world of music-making, or critical acclaim. Under the moniker Caribou, Snaith's 2008 effort 'Andorra' bagged the Polaris prize – the Canadian Album of the Year award, trumping competition from Stars, Holy F*ck and Black Mountain, amongst others.
His first album since that victory exhibits a musician unchanged by critical acclaim. 'Swim is as robust an indietronica record as you'll hear these days. True, there's little amongst these 9 tracks that'll send you into a blissed-out tizzy, but Caribou is an artist that weaves together his songs piece by piece, creating a hypnotic blanket of sound that scratches and floats and burrows underneath your skin.
Opener 'Odessa' interlaces a trance-inducing, gurgling bassline with high-pitched slivers of sound and spidery electronic squiggles to impressive effect. 'Bowls' and 'Found Out' are both gloomier affairs, almost eerie, in a way; 'Kaili' is an inverted warehouse rave tune that skids and crashes across your headphones, while Born Ruffians singer Luke La Londe murmurs his way soulfully across the lovely 'Jamelia'. A pleasant record, with a heartbeat that intensifies upon repeated listens.
Review by: Lauren Murphy
Your Comments
No comments have been posted for this article yet. Be the first!
Login or Register to leave a comment
Disclaimer
The opinions expressed here are those of the viewer and do not reflect those of Entertainment.ie. Entertainment.ie accepts no responsibility, legal or otherwise, for their accuracy of content. Please contact us to report abusive content
Search Album Reviews
Over 2000 album reviews listed here...