Tarwater
http://www.morrmusic.com
styles: indie electronic, post rock, krautrock, electro
others: Lali Puna, To Rococo Rot, Christian Kleine, Air
The
Needle Was Traveling
Morr, 2005
rating: 4.5/5
reviewer: olskooly
The Needle Was Traveling, Tarwater's first album on Morr Records after
departing from Kitty-Yo, shows the German group drifting even further from their
origins in the European experimental electronic music scene and German "post
rock," and aligning themselves with a more straightforward pop sensibility.
Despite having ties to To Rococo Rot (Tarwater's Ronald Lippok was a member of
the trio) and featuring contributions from Schneider TM and Rechenzentrum,
The Needle Was Traveling surprises the listener immensely, as it is
essentially a pop album disguised in the trappings of experimental electronic
music.
Though Tarwater have historically been primarily an instrumental group, this
time around, easily two-thirds of the songs on The Needle Was Traveling
feature vocals. Granted, the lyrics are not necessarily what one might call
profound, and they often veer towards the repetitive, but they do succeed in
adding some variety and texture to the music. Even without the vocals, the album
is an incredibly diverse affair; drawing from any number of musical sources and
styles from Kraut and Electro to '60s pop. But the vocals augment the music by
adding warmth and depth, and perhaps even assist in pushing the album, in part,
into the realm of dance music.
Furthermore, the record is inordinately catchy right from the start. Driving
beats, melodic hooks, and beautiful, intricate arrangements serve to draw the
listener in immediately. It's an interesting fusion of glitch, post rock, indie
rock, and guitar-oriented pop with a driving, compelling Krautrock backbone. A
great deal of effort was clearly put into the making of this album. The
production is lush and crystalline, and the melodies are dense and aplenty.
It's also perhaps important to note that the subtle influence of Air is also
omnipresent on The Needle Was Traveling. Some of the proggy keyboards and
horns sound not dissimilar to those frequently employed by the French band. In
fact, on several of the tracks, the album has the effect of sounding basically
like a German experimental electronic band which succumbed, in part, to the
influence of Air. Like Air, Alpha, or perhaps Mellow, the album is rife with the
emotionally charged: a Bacharachian synthesis of contemporary electronica and
late '60s/early '70s easy listening. Melodic almost to a fault, this is perhaps
the German equivalent to Air's Gallic schtick. The record is, however,
punctuated with other instrumentals, such as the sublime "Yeah," which are dark
and strange enough to counterbalance the mawkish sentimentality of some of the
other pieces. Beneath every track here, however, is a somewhat dark, Teutonic
undercurrent (at times, an almost martial bombast) which anchors the tracks to
their harsher, more experimental roots. Overall, an impressive, eminently
enjoyable album.
1. Across the Dial
2. Stone
3. Seven of Nine
4. Entry
5. Babylonian Tower
6. TV Blood
7. The People
8. All That
9. Jackie
10. Yeah
11. In a Single Place
12. 90 Days
13. Unseen in the Disco
14. Home Tonight

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