May 6th, 2008 10:59am
I Woke Up Like A Cop Just Told Me To Freeze
Sloan “Witch’s Wand” - The funny thing about Sloan’s previous album Never Hear The End Of It was the way its 30 track sprawl was sequenced so well that it ended up sounding like the tightest, most unified record the band had ever released. Their follow-up, Parallel Play, moves in the opposite direction — it’s brief and lean, but the group’s four singer-songwriters are on different pages, playing to their respective strengths and following their own muses. Chris Murphy and Andrew Scott favor scruffy power-pop eclecticism, Patrick Pentland continues to supply meaty yet weirdly aloof riff rockers that would do Stone Gossard proud, and Jay Ferguson refines his penchant for sleek, finely nuanced mid-tempo tunes that borrow liberally from old school R&B and lite FM groovers.
Ferguson is the most successful and consistent this time around. His friendly, low-key tenor has grown sweeter with age, and his arrangements have become increasingly spacious and graceful. All three of his numbers have a relaxed, warm vibe that sharply contrasts with the selections on Parallel Play penned by Pentland, who leans so hard on compression and studio effects to compensate for his comparatively thin singing voice that his tunes come out sounding rather crisp and chilly. The band use the drastic difference in tone to their advantage in sequencing the album — Pentland and Ferguson cuts are run back to back twice over, with the former’s tightly-wound rockers giving way to the latter’s mellow harmonies and gently floating chords. Whereas the two could easily clash, they instead work as each other’s foil, and give their album a greater sense of dynamics, if not stylistic unity. (Click here to buy it from Yep Roc.)





5/6/08 4:30 pm
I think I prefer “Cheap Champagne” to this one, thought “Witches Wand” does have the Chris backing vocals which makes it feel a little more Sloan.
Patrick’s songs are weird, structurally, on Parallel Play. Where most pop songs are ABABCBB he’s doing more of a AABBCC sort of thing, especially “Burn for It” which starts out like mid-’90s JAMC but then ends up like a Navy Blues fist-pumper.
Matthew, what do you make of “Too Many People”? It seemed inevitable that they’d eventually dip their toes into tropical waters, given enough albums.
5/6/08 4:30 pm
I think I prefer “Cheap Champagne” to this one, thought “Witches Wand” does have the Chris backing vocals which makes it feel a little more Sloan.
Patrick’s songs are weird, structurally, on Parallel Play. Where most pop songs are ABABCBB he’s doing more of a AABBCC sort of thing, especially “Burn for It” which starts out like mid-’90s JAMC but then ends up like a Navy Blues fist-pumper.
Matthew, what do you make of “Too Many People”? It seemed inevitable that they’d eventually dip their toes into tropical waters, given enough albums.
5/6/08 4:48 pm
I like “Too Many,” it’s actually one of the songs I enjoy the most on the record. As far as Andrew Scott pastiches go, I do prefer “Down in the Basement.”
“Burn For It” is really interesting — it’s the kind of thing Sloan does really well, which is take pretty stock song forms, and just knock them ever so slightly so that they scan as good normal rock songs, and you don’t quite notice the skewed bits unless you’re looking for it. I especially like the “I’ve got a barb-wired hard and you can’t handle it” section of that song. I’m looking forward to that one live. Can’t say the same of “Believe In Me” — I think that one is corny and kind of a dud and wish they hadn’t opened the record with it.
5/6/08 4:48 pm
I like “Too Many,” it’s actually one of the songs I enjoy the most on the record. As far as Andrew Scott pastiches go, I do prefer “Down in the Basement.”
“Burn For It” is really interesting — it’s the kind of thing Sloan does really well, which is take pretty stock song forms, and just knock them ever so slightly so that they scan as good normal rock songs, and you don’t quite notice the skewed bits unless you’re looking for it. I especially like the “I’ve got a barb-wired hard and you can’t handle it” section of that song. I’m looking forward to that one live. Can’t say the same of “Believe In Me” — I think that one is corny and kind of a dud and wish they hadn’t opened the record with it.
5/20/08 7:02 pm
I can’t listen to “Witches Wand” without wanting to make a little “nuh-uh” sort of finger wag in the air. That very fact makes me uncomfortable with this song.
But I love “Burn for It.” That’s the kind of goofball I like in my Sloan.
5/20/08 7:02 pm
I can’t listen to “Witches Wand” without wanting to make a little “nuh-uh” sort of finger wag in the air. That very fact makes me uncomfortable with this song.
But I love “Burn for It.” That’s the kind of goofball I like in my Sloan.