Menomena
http://www.menomena.com
styles: psychedelic pop, experimental
others: The Flaming Lips, The Shins
I
Am the Fun Blame Monster
Muuuhahaha!, 2003
rating: 5/5
reviewer: will(oma
Okay, let's face it. If it wasn't for Pitchfork's spotlighting of I Am the
Fun Blame Monster in their best new music section, I wouldn't be writing
this review. Thus, I have to take this moment to commend P-Fork for turning me
onto Menomena and countless other under-the-radar recording artists that I
might've otherwise missed. Contrary to what your pissy readers say, you guys
aren't tastemakers, but sound hunters dedicated to letting fellow sound hunters
in on the goods. It's as simple as that. Keep up the good work people.
That said, this is one of the albums of the year: completely out of left field
and completely solid from start to finish. The thick, rubbery bass and
thundering hip-hop informed drums support some of the most keenly intuitive hook
penning since The Soft Bulletin. While that Flaming Lips masterpiece is
obvious touchstone for the group, they definitely do their own thing regardless.
They put their best two feet forward with the powerhouse anthems, "Cough
Coughing" and "The Late Great Libido." Two majestically infectious,
unpredictable gems that (I hate quoting stupid movies but it's incredibly apt
here) "had me at hello."
While all of these songs are deserving of some mention, I'd like to point to
"Twenty Cell Revolt," "Strongest Man in the World," and "Oahu" as reasons you
should definitely not miss this recording. Starting with "Twenty Cell Revolt,"
they start with skeletal drums vocals and hand-claps that, if it wasn't
Menomena, could easily evolve into something dippy and trite. Instead, we get a
downright funkdified sax skank-up that hits a triumphant crescendo of "Try and
stop us now!" before going back to the skeletal skank-up. It sounds simple, but
there's something so extraordinarily gripping regarding the group's use of
restraint. "Strongest Man in the World" lets itself surge forth with a
reggae-inflected groove for the first two minutes before a brief, fragile vocal
coda, then the ragga returns more intense than before. The song moves your body
as well as your emotions, and that could be said to be the main draw of the
group. "Oahu" presents a filtered vocal matched with the usual up-front drumming
and a plaintive guitar and piano harmony that provides one of the more chilled
out moments of the release.
I can't implore you enough, seek this record out! It will restore your faith in
the dismal state of pop music. This shit should be on the fucking radio. I don't
mean to get crude, but college radio just doesn't get out to enough heads that
could surely find something to champion in bands as inspired, infectious, and
original as Menomena.
1. Cough Coughing
2. The Late Great Libido
3. E is Stable
4. Twenty Cell Revolt
5. Strongest Man in the World
6. Oahu
7. Trigga Hickups
8. Rose
9. The Monkey's Back

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