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NEGATIVLAND
IPSDESIP (a.k.a. SEIPSIPD, PSEIDSIP, EISPSPID, SIEDPSIP, IPSPIDES)
--Roni Sarig
PORTASTATIC
The Nature of Sap
THE NATURE OF sap? Just plain sappy is more like it. Portastatic is basically a one-man band/side project of vocalist/multi-instrumentalist Mac McCaughan of scrumptious North Carolina pop-punk legends Superchunk. Unfortunately, Portastatic falls way short of the mark: The Nature of Sap is rife with doodling clarinets, farting trumpets and clunking piano. C'mon, this ain't rock and roll. It's more like whiny, plodding out-takes from a rejected demo session for the latest Ben Folds Five album. Portastatic seems to be what happens when an aging punk rocker and his ambitious musical vision "mature": passivity, depression and terminal boredom. A hint of Superchunk's inspirational distorto-pop is evident only on the abrasive and filthy "Impolite Cheers," and that's where the comparisons abruptly end. Sorry, Mac. --Ron Bally
PETER MULVEY
deep blue
OCCUPYING THE GRAY space between contemporary, folk and lo-fi alternative (what is the line of demarcation, anyway?)--these days an increasingly crowded dugout--deep blue, Peter Mulvey's sophomore follow-up to last year's Rapture, aims broadly for mainstream appeal. With tracks like "Smoke," Mulvey appropriates blues in much the same way that Sting appropriated jazz, post-Dream of the Blue Turtles, to the same often saccharine and overly sincere ends. In its heavier moments, like "Grace" and "No Sense of Humor," the album struts a musicality similar to Ani DiFranco yet without her, um, teeth. The musicianship is refreshingly solid, with subtle and sophisticated stylings reminiscent of Lloyd Cole and Paul Westerberg, echoing their underground, somewhat "contemporary" appeal. There are even some underexpressed traces of the fervor of Bob Mould's Workbook. Owing perhaps to the very clean production and mixing of Nicholas Sansano (Soul Coughing, Public Enemy), I wanted this album to be truer to its rootsy folk underpinnings and more raw in its inspiration--call it less earnest and more honest. Beautiful tracks like "Every Mother's Son" recollect Richard Buckner's spare arrangements, while "Take This" and the title track share with Ben Harper a bluesy, blousey, soft-spoken sensuality. Despite its lack of angst and accompanying rough edge, deep blue is masterfully articulated, versatile and scattered with interesting details--obviously the hard work of a very talented songwriter. --Lisa Weeks |
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