Friday, July 22, 2011

Album Review: The Sea & Cake - The Moonlight Butterfly


The Sea and Cake’s newest mini-album (six songs puts it somewhere between EP and LP), The Moonlight Butterfly, opens with a warm deluge of ringing sound, a beat that slides in softly, murmured vocals reminiscent of the quieter moments had by Kevin Drew of Broken Social Scene.  But what makes opening track “Covers” so tranquil is the same kind of soothing monotony that ends up turning me off from the album as a whole . Yes, this is a collection of cerebral songs for the quiet life, the zen garden moments—a leaf changing colors, rippling pond water, a butterfly… in the moonlight—but there isn’t enough heart to sustain them, and they end up making me feel more like I’m mindlessly riding in an elevator or sitting in a waiting room at the dentist’s office than contemplating life’s big questions.

Coasting along for nearly 20 years, The Sea and Cake has earned a fair share of indie cred for their seemingly effortless ability to master the serene art of flow, crafting their albums so that each track slides seamlessly into the next. However, Butterfly leads me to wonder if maybe these Chicago-based post-rockers haven’t taken it a step too far, sacrificed charisma and spirit for the sake of their almighty flow. Gone is the unique flavor that kept the band’s earlier music from falling flat. Gone are the unexpected moments of strangeness—bursts of steel drums, crunchy textures, odd little moany background vocals—the kinds of blips and lumps that kept their sound fresh and alive. Now the sound feels smoothed over, almost glib, like the band learned how to make a new kind of cake with half the calories, and moved to Florida, where the sea has no waves. 

There are a few distinctive elements—a bubbly beachy vibe in “Up on the North Shore”, some scratchy guitar slides on “Monday”—and plenty of quiet beauty to go around, but ultimately, there’s simply not enough to cling to, not enough to feel. Nothing breaks through the cool gloss of overproduction and the vocals feel all but sedated. It’s not bad music, but it’s boring. Each song ends up sounding like a slightly different version of the song that preceded it, and all we have to interrupt the endless smoothness is the strange (but not strange enough) title track, “The Moonlight Butterfly”, an electronic interlude rife with sparkly staccato and mounting synths that build and build and build… to nothing.

This album takes me past relaxation, past tranquility, into a place that leaves me numb.  I really do want to appreciate the intricacies of vocalist and lead guitarist Sam Prekop’s instrumental layering and laudable experimentation with analog synthesizers, but they sound stifled under their own weight, cancelled out, pureed into soup, like the individual pieces are never nurtured enough to thrive or isolated enough to shine.

In a 2001 Pitchfork interview with Prekop, writer Brian Roberts describes the artist as “content with himself, his art, and his world,” allowing him to create music that is “the very soul of contented beauty.”  But that was ten years ago; now the contentment feels stale and I find it hard to believe that nothing within the past decade has broken through Prekop’s beautifully contented soul enough to bring some real passion into his voice.   If anything, it seems like the contentedness has faded into lethargy. The more I listen to this album, the more I want to grab the man, shake him and scream, “The world is on fire! GIVE ME SOMETHING I CAN FEEL!” 

By Hilary Cadigan
Originally published in Consequence of Sound

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