Life Starts Here
(Fading Captain Series, 2002)
The 2nd, and to date, final Airport 5 record hit the world with a shrug in 2002. All of the bright spots the might have shone through in the debut pretty much fizzle upon impact here. Again, the powerhouse GBV combo of Tobin Sprout and Robert Pollard teamed up for another go round of home recorded tunes. Tobin Sprout recorded the music in Lealand, Michigan while Pollard recorded vocals in Ohio. Unfortunately, this LP is essentially one drab outing from the two both musically and vocally. Following this LP, the Airport 5 ship was permanently grounded. Flying pun!
SIDE
A:
Intro-
2 Dark,
bouncy piano intro with Pollard’s surreal, ominous vocals on top. Opener mood track, but not much else.
We’re
in the Business - 4
The surreal intro doesn’t lead into an equally
weird track, but DOES lead into an airy East River Pipe sounding rendition of lofty
bedroom pop. Some poor, out-of-tune singing
by Pollard hurts a bit, but an overall standout
Yellow
Wife No. 5- 4
Cold, wintry pop track
with simple, melodic hooks. You can almost see your
breath while listening to this distant track.
Wrong
Drama Addiction (…And Life Starts Here…)-
1 Repetitive
vocal riff of “And
life starts herrrerrerer…), over and over again. Hypnotic, for sure. Oddly soothing even. Yea. But at 7 interminable minutes in the middle of the album, it is to say the least, daunting. 3 minutes of recorded rain and muddling around at the end.
life starts herrrerrerer…), over and over again. Hypnotic, for sure. Oddly soothing even. Yea. But at 7 interminable minutes in the middle of the album, it is to say the least, daunting. 3 minutes of recorded rain and muddling around at the end.
However
Young They Are- 2
Adult contemporary stuff
that sounds like it should be playing in a documentary about the
saving of the rain forest or something. Hackneyed percussion,
and far too LiteFM.
The
Dawntrust Guarantee- 1
Bad robotic
pulsating noises, and modulated vocals over one plus minutes of junk
noise. No thanks.
SIDE
B:
Forever
Since- 2
Light track. Upfront vocals in desperate need of a touch of reverb, and feathery strums leading the
way behind it. Not much of note here.
Impression
of a Leg- 3
One of the catchiest vocal hooks on this album, even if Pollard
doesn’t always seem to be singing with the muted music in the
background. He seems to be off on his own melodic trip, but no
matter.
How
Brown?- 2
Wire thin guitar lines,
steadily holding it together with automated hi-hat hits buried
underneath Pollard crooning, and a rather epic GBV sounding chorus. The
song, however is about 2 minutes longer than necessary.
Natives
Approach the Plane-
1 Kill
me. Repeat over and over on top of crappy, dated music released 10
years after it sounds dated.
I
Can’t Freeze Anymore-
1
Another cold sounding robotic track. Sounds like it’s played from
inside a frigid factory in outer space. You know, where all the music comes from? Pollard can’t do much with
this since the music’s so damn bad.
Out
in the World- 3
Silly blips and bloops,
but a great vocal performance saves this song. Somehow becomes
catchy, and a strange closer to a cold, dull album.
Yep, "Wrong Drama Addiction" is a slog. I kind of like this album apart from that. Listening to "How Brown" right now. Not as good as the first one though.
ReplyDelete"wrong drama addiction" is bob saying if you can't handle me at my worst you don't deserve me at my best. "dawntrust guarantee" is him saying "WHY ARE YOU IGNORING ME???!!!"
ReplyDeletehad "how brown" stuck in my head yesterday. it's catchy.
ReplyDelete