Quasi
http://www.theequasi.com
styles: indie rock, indie pop
others: Built to Spill, Home, Grandaddy
When the Going Gets Dark
Touch and Go, 2006
rating: 3.5/5
reviewer: dave gurney
If we are to trace back the history of husband/wife musical duos, Quasi function
as a significant moment. Sam Coomes and Janet Weiss came later than many seminal
acts, like Ike and Tina or Captain and Tenille, but they also arrived ahead of
the curve of such acts in the indie scene, like Mates of State or The White
Stripes(?). With over ten years of playing together, numerous side projects (including Sleater-Kinney for Weiss), and the very dissolution of their marriage, Quasi
have proven themselves able to endure, while constantly eking up the stakes
with each new release.
Their stripped-down, yet frenetic approach to pop songcraft shines through on
When the Going Gets Dark. Not as political as their last effort, Hot Shit,
the new album shifts attention to the instrumental side of Quasi, with "Presto
Change-o" perfectly distilling their insistent and sinister balance of sound. In
fact, that song is positioned in the stellar middle section, together with
"Peace and Love" and "Beyond the Sky" -- songs that nicely utilize the gauzy
psych-inclined mixing talents of Dave Fridmann. "Beyond the Sky" especially
stands out as a great experimental moment for the band, soaked with mellotron
and plenty of other less identifiable elements. It's a much headier piece than
I'd come to expect from Quasi.
The opening and closing exist well enough, but there's something about Coomes's
words that can instantly cause me to cringe. The very first line of the first
track "Alice the Goon," "Electric eel - swimming through the seas of the
unreal," is a perfect example of this. I feel like maybe I've caught an indie
band in their Romper Room covers phase, a feeling intensified when he ends the
song with "I'm Popeye the Sailor Man/ I live in a garbage can." The music
may be taut and purposeful, but the lyrics distance me. That's why When the
Going Gets Dark works the best of any Quasi album for me. With more focus on
the adventurous composition and skilled playing of Coomes and Weiss, it would be
hard for anyone, including myself, to dismiss this as anything other than
impressive. Now, if they just hire a new lyricist for their next one...
1. Alice the Goon
2. The Rhino
3. When the Going Gets Dark
4. I Don't Know You Anymore
5. Peace and Love
6. Beyond the Sky
7. Presto Change-o
8. Poverty Sucks
9. Merry X-mas
10. Death Culture Blues
11. Invisible Star

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