Rating:
Roots and Crowns is Califone's most sophisticated record to date, a natural-- if lighter-- extension of 2004's Heron King Blues, and a coherent aesthetic declaration (which is even more of a triumph considering it was recorded in chunks with new gear, after frontman Tim Rutili packed up for California and the band's instruments were raided during their last tour). This is Califone's climax: Roots and Crowns blurs all lines between the organic and the synthesized, and is as much a product of the gut as the mind, with each perfectly placed skronk-and-twitter hitting its intellectual and emotional targets.
Over the course of eight full-lengths, Califone have proven their prowess for improvisational out-jazz and melodic scrap-folk in equal measure-- Roots and Crowns sees both impulses at play, over some of the band's best-written songs. Longtime engineer (and former Red Red Meat member, and part-time Califone percussionist) Brian Deck orchestrates the loops and squeaks, piecing distinct, synthesized bits into cohesive pictures, and ensuring that the end result still sounds like something your dog dug up in the backyard and spit out, slobber-slicked and gummed, on your front doormat.
Lyrically, Rutili favors tiny, imagistic vignettes over narrative arcs, and these songs read more like prose poems than stories-- which, given the hyper-fragmented sound-collage of Califone's instrumentation, makes a certain kind of sense. In addictive opener "Pink and Sour", Rutilli talks-- twice-- about losing his language over rollicking tribal drums and slide guitar ("Along your skin/ Lost my language," "Cotton in the calm along your side/ Lost my language"), and his bandmates compensate in full, slipping in vivid percussive flourishes that speak remarkably well in his absence. On the whimsical "Spiders House", fellow Chicagoans Bitter Tears lend brassy toots, muted trumpet and trombone sighing, resigned and tired, while Rutili's rusty pipes spew abstract laments: "After the quiet bleeds peel and age familiar/ Peace in the pain." "The Orchids", lifted from former-Throbbing Gristle outfit Psychic TV, is, according to Rutili, the record's inspiration, and is beautifully rendered here-- Rutili' s voice is cottony and vaguely-love-struck, while wisps of harmonica weave in and out of his coos.
Califone have always been stupidly underappreciated, and the further we stumble into the 21st century, the more this music starts to feel both familiar and necessary: Roots and Crowns is bluesy and soulful without reverting to revivalist schtick, and experimental without relying on blind cut-and-pasting. It is old and new, dirty and clean, alienating and accessible, sweet and ugly, organic and industrial, doting and vicious. It is one of the most quintessentially American records imaginable.
Most Read Record Reviews
- Portishead: Third
- M83: Saturdays=Youth
- Weezer: Weezer (The Red Album)
- Coldplay: Viva la Vida or Death and All His Friends
- Scarlett Johansson: Anywhere I Lay My Head
- Lil Wayne: Tha Carter III
- Death Cab for Cutie: Narrow Stairs
- Fleet Foxes: Fleet Foxes
- No Age: Nouns
- Cut Copy: In Ghost Colours
- Vampire Weekend: Vampire Weekend
- Sigur Rós: Með suð í eyrum við spilum endalaust
- Girl Talk: Feed the Animals
- Beck: Modern Guilt
- Bonnie "Prince" Billy: Lie Down in the Light
- My Morning Jacket : Evil Urges
- Flight of the Conchords: Flight of the Conchords
- Radiohead: The Best Of / The Best Of [Special Edition]
- Tapes 'n Tapes: Walk It Off
- Madonna: Hard Candy
- Wolf Parade: At Mount Zoomer
- Nine Inch Nails: The Slip
- Titus Andronicus: The Airing of Grievances
- Spiritualized: Songs in A&E
- Sun Kil Moon / Mark Kozelek: April / Nights
- Air France: No Way Down EP
- Spoon: Don't You Evah EP
- The Roots: Rising Down
- Islands: Arm's Way
- The National: The Virginia EP
- Crystal Antlers: EP
- Muse: H.A.A.R.P.
- Animal Collective: Water Curses EP
- Fuck Buttons: Street Horrrsing
- N.E.R.D.: Seeing Sounds
- Boris: Smile
- The Last Shadow Puppets: The Age of the Understatement
- HEALTH: DISCO
- Santogold: Santogold
- Liz Phair: Exile in Guyville (15th Anniversary)
- The Replacements: Sorry Ma, Forgot to Take Out the Trash / Stink / Hootenanny / Let It Be
- Frightened Rabbit: Midnight Organ Fight
- The Cool Kids: The Bake Sale EP
- The Notwist: The Devil, You + Me
- Silver Jews: Lookout Mountain, Lookout Sea
- Atmosphere: When Life Gives You Lemons, You Paint That Shit Gold
- The Kooks: Konk
- Mates of State: Re-Arrange Us
- Free Kitten: Inherit
- Tokyo Police Club: Elephant Shell
