Artist: The Arrowsics
Links:
https://www.facebook.com/Arrowsics
http://www.thearrowsics.com/
We've lost the Arrowsics to Portland,
Maine; but with the Ring of Oak EP, we get a record of their 8+ years
in Chicago. Brother and sister duo Trevor and Molly Geiger, have
produced another compelling collection of naturalistic soundscapes.
As Trevor's vocals approach the beauty
of James Taylor, Molly's are alluringly delicate like those of
Harriet Wheeler, Leigh Nash and Nina Persson. Together, their
harmonies blend as well as Laura Veirs and Colin Meloy on The
Decemberists' "Yankee Bayonet (I Will Be Home Then)."
But the Arrowsics are more than the sum
of their attractive vocal pairing. Not unlike dream-pop duo Beach
House, the Arrowsics' layers of expressive guitar imbue their songs
with emotional resonance. (The Arrowsics' "Ring of Oak"
wouldn't have sounded out of place on Beach House's heralded album,
Bloom.) "Lost" is a good example: The first 15 seconds
introduce not one but two mood-defining guitar patterns. These set up
some nice romantic lyricism, "Baby, oh baby, if you run away /
Look to the stars / Find what you need and come back to me / Right to
my arms."
Indeed, the Arrowsics' romanticism can
be truly original. On the title track, a lover who expects a proposal
of marriage eventually encounters one -- signified by the "ring"
of an oak tree. But it's more than a clever play on words. The
narrator lovingly observes that the tree's ring "grew for you."
Like the other tucked-in pleasures the
band offers (e.g. fascinating bass lines), this thoughtful caring
typifies The Arrowsics' approach to music. They're in it for the love
of the craft. In other words, they're in it for us.
*** The author of this review,
Joseph Moore, plays the wood block for the following band:
http://youtu.be/tMS73-1kCr8
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.