
Rating:
Buy it from Insound
Download it from Emusic
Digg this article
Add to del.icio.usOn the first song on their debut record, MGMT let us know how they got here. The rock song-as-origin myth is nothing new-- from "Who Do You Love" through "Immigrant Song", to "We Share Our Mother's Health" and Kanye West's "Big Brother"-- and "Time to Pretend" situates itself in that canon. Emerging initially from a viscous electronic fluid, the song quickly takes shape as a bombastic electro-glam number about rock star dreams. Accordingly, it's cheesy and clichéd, but also thick with sarcasm: Before the first chorus, MGMT sing nostalgically about having models for wives, moving to Paris, and shooting heroin. The kicker, though, is in the title itself. Knowing that the Almost Famous notion of stardom doesn't exist anymore (if it ever did), the duo of Andrew Vanwyngarden and Ben Goldwasser realize they're "fated to pretend." It's a charming idea-- making a career out of fantasizing-- and on Oracular Spectacular, they not only accept their playacting destiny, they demonstrate that, just maybe, it's a path more people should take.
MGMT find kindred spirits in Muse and Mew by dressing their melodies in the fanciful trappings of 1970s British prog, but unlike their contemporaries the duo also weaves in lessons from disco, new-wave synth-pop, and early 90s Britpop. The understanding that youthful innocence is a potent force-- a theme first established in "Time to Pretend"-- continues throughout the record. Instead of the "Knights of Cydonia", though, MGMT fights "Weekend Wars", ostensibly an ode to the fictionalized childhood battles that treat backyards as independent colonies in need of conquering. The gentle, chiming melody and effete vocals of "The Youth" recall Sparks or Queen at their most restrained moments, and "Kids" comes across as an inspirational dance anthem for playgrounders.
Most impressive on Spectacular is Vanwyngarden and Goldwasser's ability to dabble, with the shared understanding that whatever they do is Big. "Pieces of What" is an unexpected acoustic guitar piece, but it's delivered like an outtake from Suede's Dog Man Star. "4th Dimensional Transition" augments its cavernous psychedelic vocals with a jacked-up BPM count, and on "Electric Feel", MGMT pull off lithe, falsetto electro-funk surprisingly well. There's not much to the song aside from a Barry Gibb vocal and limber bassline, but within the context of the rest of Spectacular, it makes perfect sense. In fact, so does the duo's current tour pairing, as the openers for Of Montreal. Kevin Barnes' emergence as an icon of theatricalized electro-glam seems the ideal toward which the duo should strive. They're still young, of course; they've got plenty of time to figure that out.
-Eric Harvey, October 22, 2007
MySpace: http://www.myspace.com/mgmt
- Vampire Weekend Vampire Weekend
- Radiohead In Rainbows [CD 2]
- Jonny Greenwood There Will Be Blood OST
- The Mars Volta The Bedlam in Goliath
- Radiohead In Rainbows
- Cat Power Jukebox
- The Magnetic Fields Distortion
- Times New Viking Rip It Off
- Hot Chip Made in the Dark
- Beach House Devotion
- British Sea Power Do You Like Rock Music?
- Atlas Sound Let the Blind Lead Those Who Can See But
- Fleet Foxes Sun Giant EP
- Beck Odelay: Deluxe Edition
- Michael Jackson Thriller: 25th Anniversary Edition
- The Simpsons Testify
- Hercules and Love Affair Hercules and Love Affair
- High Places 03/07 – 09/07
- Stephen Malkmus & the Jicks Real Emotional Trash
- Andrew Bird Soldier On EP
- Xiu Xiu Women as Lovers
- Fuck Buttons Street Horrrsing
- El Guincho Alegranza!
- Black Mountain In the Future
- The Mountain Goats Heretic Pride
- Nine Inch Nails Y34RZ3R0R3M1X3D
- Lupe Fiasco The Cool
- The Ruby Suns Sea Lion
- Goldfrapp Seventh Tree
- Los Campesinos! Hold on Now, Youngster...
- Drive-By Truckers Brighter Than Creation's Dark
- The Raveonettes Lust Lust Lust
- Morrissey Greatest Hits
- Neon Neon Stainless Style
- Daft Punk Alive 2007
- Rivers Cuomo Alone: The Home Recordings of Rivers Cuomo
- Why? Alopecia
- Burial Untrue
- The Honeydrips Here Comes the Future
- Jason Collett Here's to Being Here
Measured over the past 3 months (Last update: 3/25/2008)


Related News
