Monday, September 24, 2012

CD Odyssey Disc 422: The Shins


This next review has disrupted the naturally random order of things as a “NEW” album, as per rule #5 (see sidebar).  I don’t usually invoke rule #5 these days unless I’ve just seen the tour associated with the album.  That’s what’s happened here, so like with my recent reviews of Lyle Lovett and Janelle Monae, I’ll also review the concert.

Disc 442 is… Port of Morrow
Artist: The Shins

Year of Release: 2012

What’s up with the Cover?  I’m not entirely sure, although it’s decidedly creepy.  Some kind of alien rabbit, or maybe a Kachina doll seems to be emerging from a mystical portal.  I wonder if considering the album title, the cover is a veiled reference to Donnie Darko, which featured a rabbit (of sorts) from the future.

How I Came To Know It:  Sheila and I were already established Shins fans when this album came out, so this was just us drilling through the collection.

How It Stacks Up:  We have four Shins albums, which I think is all of them, not counting James Mercer’s other projects.  Of the four, “Port of Morrow” holds up nicely, and I think it is second or third best, depending on my mood.

Rating:  4 stars

When “Port of Morrow” was released it had been five years since the last Shins album (the five star masterpiece “Wincing the Night Away”).  In between, James Mercer had teamed up with Danger Mouse to make an album under the name “Broken Bells” which was also pretty awesome, so the expectation levels were kind of high for “Port of Morrow.”

Of course, with the exception of singer and creative force James Mercer, the band had been pretty much completely replaced since 2007, so for me that expectation was muted.   A great band is a bit of alchemy, and you mess with the formula at your peril.  In the case of the Shins, it seems to have worked out, which is a significant testament to Mercer’s amazing talent.

The songwriting is still there, exceptional melodies that are like ghosts in the ears; hauntingly present when you’re listening, but ephemeral and hard to hang on to as soon as they stop.   It’s hard to explain, but it is a quality I feel in every Shins album; like Mercer is a preacher on the shores of the River Styx, full of an eerie compulsion that is then forgotten in the very act of drinking them in.  At least that’s how they are to me, maybe I just need to listen to them more and they’ll stick.

Lyrically, I’ve complained about early Shins albums being deliberately obtuse, but on this record and “Wincing the Night Away” Mercer seems to have corrected this affectation, and is now content to sing full thoughts.

A lot of those thoughts are sad and troubled, and I think “Port of Morrow” is at its best when covering troubling topics.  “No Way Down” is a song about the gap between the haves and the have nots.  My favourite line is:

“Out beyond the western squalls
In an Indian land
They work for nothing at all
They don't know the mall or the layaway plan.”

The tune is fast and fun, the perfect juxtaposition to the topic.  If you aren’t careful you’ll find yourself dancing along mindlessly to the catchy tune, and not pay attention to the deeper message.  I think Mercer wants some people to do this, just to prove his point.

In addition to the songwriting, Mercer’s voice still amazes me.  He hits high notes no man has any right being able to hit, and still has enough power in the high register to fill them with deeper import, with plenty left over.

“Port of Morrow” doesn’t have the same depth as “Wincing the Night Away” lyrically, and it doesn’t haunt me the same way when the last song ends, but it adds a nice element of pop/disco jump that I can only assume Mercer learned from his time in “Broken Bells.”  I like this new flavor, which shows that great bands are only great when they’re willing to always add something new to their sound.

The Concert, September 24, 2012 – The Royal Theatre

Sheila and I took in the Shins concert at the Royal Theatre on Sunday night and it was a mixed bag, but most of the problems had nothing to do with the Shins.

Firstly, the opening act, “Washed Out” was not up to the task.  Admittedly it is hard to be the opening act, with the sound all set up for the guys who come on after you, it can sound pretty muddy up there.

That said, the words of every song were unintelligible, and without them it was even more painfully evident that every song essentially sounded the same.  That sameness took the form of heavily derivative eighties beats, which Sheila correctly pointed out sounded like a re-imagined “Simple Minds.”

On top of this, the light show regularly shone floods into the audience directly into my eyes.  There were five lights, and by the end of it I felt like Jean-Luc Picard being interrogated by the Cardassians (although in my case, there actually were five lights).

Anyway, I’d have preferred the road that brought the band to town to have been washed out.

Once the Shins started playing, things improved dramatically.  These guys are very tight live, and the songs sounded as good as the studio recordings.  They didn’t do a lot of innovative stuff with what they played, apart from minor phrasing decisions on the vocals of a couple of the older songs, but I think it is a positive when the band that can sound as good live as on the recording.

The set list was a good mix.  It was a healthy dose of the new album, with the favourites from previous records sprinkled in.  Both Sheila and I were disappointed that some of our more obscure favourites (such as “A Comet Appears”) didn’t make it into the show, but that’s always a hazard of liking an obscure track.

Their encore was not as well selected, featuring one recognizable song followed by about ten minutes of atmospheric noodling.  I like atmospheric noodling as much as the next guy (OK not quite as much, but I’m tolerant of it).  However, timing for this stuff is important in a live show.  Any artsy stuff should come about three quarters of the way through the show, after the audience is good and warmed up, but leaving room at the end to go out on a high with some crowd faves.  You also want to save some of those faves for the encore.  Closing the show with a bunch of atmospheric wankery was the concert equivalent of drunken sex; ending the show with a sleepy resignation, rather than a bang.

Worst of all, was the audience experience.  Some guy in the back was shouting “woo!” about once every bar, and when he wasn’t “wooing” he was loudly insulting the crowd for not standing up enough.  Standing up at a concert is a spontaneous and joyful thing; you wreck it when you demand its appearance prematurely.  Also dude – it’s rude.

The area near us had people talking through the concert, although mercifully not as loud as Standalone Guy.  It made me wonder why they bought tickets – you could do that just as easily at home while listening to the four singles you downloaded from iTunes.

To be fair, a lot of the fans were as rapt as Sheila and I, and it was nice to see other people came for the music, and were equally aghast at the bad behavior of an unhappy few.  However, even legitimate fans had no defence from the legions of bad, out-of-time clappers.  These folks took up their cause even during slow parts of songs where clapping would’ve been awkward even if it was on the beat.

Still, I’m glad I went, and the Shins were good enough to ‘shine’ through the challenges and deliver a generally solid show.

Best tracks:  Simple Song, It’s Only Life, No Way Down, Fall of ‘82

No comments: