It’s
easy to find a record stockpiled
with buzzing guitars or brain-rattling
beats.
The challenge in these fast-paced,
pedal-to-the-metal times is
to discover music to kick back
to, songs that call for reflection
rather than embrace rowdiness.
With Obsolescence, Dallas-based
outfit Crushed Stars deliver
the next great album to accompany
your subdued moods. It’s
an album that blends pop sophistication
with soulful songwriting, bringing
to mind Big Star’s Third,
the Style Council and even Burt
Bacharach.
The
brainchild of multi-instrumentalist
Todd Gautreau, Crushed Stars
released its first album, Self
Navigation, in 2001, a response
to all the Nirvana clones that
dominated the late 1990s rock
scene. Gautreau had made his
mark as an electronic musician
in the vein of Brian Eno and
Steve Reich, recording and releasing
albums under the name Sonogram.
(Check out the collection Substrates:
Ambient Works 1995-1999.) But
he’d maintained an interest
in gentle pop, and he saw an
opportunity. “Once all
the loud guitar stuff died down
I thought it was safe to pick
up a guitar again and do what
I always intended to do, make
quiet bedroom guitar music,”
he says.
On
Obsolescence, his first album
for the Arena Rock Recording
Company, he refines his approach,
deftly weaving in subtle electronics
and rolling rhythms. Recorded
mostly in his home in Dallas,
the disc finds him singing thoughtful,
insightful lyrics over perfect,
painstaking melodies. He layers
vocal tracks to achieve an otherworldly
effect (“For Someone With
Amnesia”), wrings melancholy
from his guitar strings (“Echoes
of Astrid”), and relies
on the simplicity of a piano
figure (“The Answers Are
Not Clear”). On the standout
“Sleepyhead,” Gautreau
creates a wistful, astral aesthetic
worthy of the band’s name,
with a roiling guitar riff and
heartfelt singing reminiscent
of Red House Painters. And he’s
not completely averse to stepping
up the tempo, as he does on
the propulsive “Rockets,”
which also shows off a knack
for witty metaphor with lines
like “Too many rockets
at my window, and I’ve
only got this one grenade.”
Still,
Crushed Stars’ emphasis
is atmospheric, minor-key pop,
and this adherence makes for
a consistent, entirely satisfying
ride on the seesaw between gloom
and hope. It’s quiet and
understated, just like the man
who crafted it.
“Most
people tell me I am quiet,”
Gautreau says. “I’m
in my own head a lot, just thinking
when I’m doing something
else.”
So
what’s the man behind
Crushed Stars thinking about?
The
answer’s as straightforward
as the songs on Obsolescence.
“Music,” he says.
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