Calling Zero
(2002, Fading Captain Series)
What
do you get when two '90s indie-rock superheroes team up and record a
full length record together? What do you get when fucking Mac
McCaughan of Superchunk and Robert "Guided by Fucking Voices"
Pollard put their heads together to shit out a surefire golden nugget?
Well, you get a messy pile of decent songs, with mediocre melodies and
ridiculous lyrics.
Like
most of Pollard's side projects, someone plays all the instruments,
while Pollard writes melodies and records vocals over said instrumentation.
Songwriting credits are shared and the rest is discography
history. In this case, McCaughan brings some decent songs to
the table, but for the most part, Pollard fails to hammer them
home. What should've been a pairing for the ages winds
up a somewhat lackluster 12 tracks. Somethings looks better on paper.
Calling
Zero- 2 Mac
writes a very hushed, Portastatic-esque track with easy listening
guitar riff. Unfortunately, Pollard's melody and seeming lack of any
interesting or clever lyric ruins this song. In fact, the lyrics are
so terrible, the song is legitimately black-eyed.
Never
Forget Where You Get Them- 5 Excellent
fuzzed-out trip down a nostalgic summer's lane on Mac’s
part. Pollard’s melodies are soaring and complements the track well. The cylinders were properly firing on this one.
Red
Hot Halos- 2 Mac’s
song sounds a bit like fellow Merge artists, akin to a poppier
Magnetic Fields track or a Ladybug Transistor song. Unfortunately,
the music isn’t anything to write home about, and Pollard does
little make it remotely noteworthy. The chorus is down right
disappointing.
Again
the Waterloo- 3 Completely
out of left-field Mac composition. Lo-fi electronica? Yup.Backed with a guitar that sounds like it’s bleeding out
from the last fragments of shattered amp cone. Pollard is deadpanned
and melodic. Somehow this all works, and is rather enjoyable,
if not ridiculous.
Climb- 2 More
electronic bleeps and bloops that are distracting and sound just
plain stupid. It’s unfortunate, the fuzzed guitar lead is pretty classic Portastatic/slower Superchunk that gets lost. Pollard sounds weepy
and half-assed throughout.
SIDE
B:
Go
Gold-
2 Akin
to something off the Portastatic Nature
of Sap LP.
Which means, it’s rather boring. Strummed major chords at a slow
tempo. With Pollard’s natural gifts for melody, this has the
potential to be crafted into a great ballad. Instead, we get
extremely cheesy lyrics and an awkward upwardly inflected choral
melody that’s more grating than anything else.
Lifetime
for the Mavericks- 4 Brittle,
pop-punk riff with synth swells. Thankfully, Pollard does reach into the bag of tricks, and constructs an enjoyable melody
over this simple, short song.
Throat
of Throats- 2 A
year after Calling
Zero came
out, The Postal Service would strike it big on Sub Pop with their
LP Give
Up. If one didn't know the years, I'd say, musically, this sounds like a poor imitation. A sub par, electronic pop song with lifeless, and occasional out-of-key
Pollard vocals. And what a terrible title.
Ironhorse
Worm- 2 Rather low-key keyboard composition by Mac. Has all the fun of
attending a church service.
It
Is Divine -
4 Years
later this would be released on the Delicious Pie and Thank You For Calling rarities disc as an old demo Pollard had lying
around. Mac handles the music well. Delicately sprucing it up
into a poppy Mac-tinged tune. Pollard handles the melodies well. Easy
listening for sure, but one of the brighter spots on the LP.
Dumbluck
Systems Stormfront-
1
Minor
chord acoustic strums on Mac’s part that can put even the most
restless insomniac to sleep with its mundane nature. Eventually, some trumpets come into the mix over said boring acoustic strums. So
boring, this closer actually makes me mad. To top it off, Pollard sings a melody that’s
nothing to write home about. hoooo-hmmmmm?
I love this album. I agree, "It Is Divine" is definitely the stand-out track.
ReplyDeleteThis comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDeleteYeah an overly disappointing release. Superchunk are pretty shitty by my estimation. I'm glad they covered the Verlaines 'All Laid Down' but it also displays how relatively shitty they are. And yet totally overrated by the US press while the Verlaines are vastly underrated.
ReplyDeleteOooops it was Lying In State. Sounding not so bad to my drunken ears now.
Delete"never forget..." such a great song.
ReplyDeletetracks like "red hot halos" and "climb" are odd, but i'll stick take this album over "robert pollard is off to business" and "crawling distance" any day.
ReplyDelete