It's not surprising that
My Brightest Diamond's second album was originally intended to be a string quartet-based work, or that it was six years in the making.
A Thousand Shark's Teeth is much more orchestrated, polished, and ambitious than
Bring Me the Workhorse, and draws even more from
Shara Worden's classical training (as well as the work of
Maurice Ravel,
Tricky,
Tom Waits, and painter
Anselm Kiefer). The album's elegant instrumentation and arrangements are nothing if not impressive, whether they're relatively simple, as on
"If I Were Queen," which concentrates on
Worden's immaculate soprano and pizzicato strings, or lavish, as on
"Inside a Boy," where chilly strings and keyboards rise to meet
Worden's ice princess vocals. However,
A Thousand Shark's Teeth sacrifices some of the playfulness and energy that made
Bring Me the Workhorse so compelling, and at times
Worden's ambitions come close to getting the better of her.
"Apples"' plinking percussion -- which owes as much to
Evelyn Glennie as it does to
Tom Waits -- makes day-to-day chores like folding laundry sound like performance art, and as eerily lovely as
"Black & Coustaud" is, its frosty cabaret whimsy is so theatrical that it vaguely resembles an avant-garde show tune. Strangely, despite the album's elaborate scope, at times
A Thousand Shark's Teeth is too subtle to make a strong initial impression. However, when the album does connect -- usually when the arrangements and melodies are more direct -- the results are stunning.
"From the Top of the World" warms up the mostly frosty sonics and resembles a distant, darker cousin of '60s symphonic pop, a feeling echoed by
"To Pluto's Moon," which channels
John Barry and
Portishead into a goth spy theme.
"Bass Player"'s smoky sensuality makes it another standout, while
"The Diamond" and
"Ice & the Storm" are immediately accessible without compromising the album's lofty themes and sounds. Big ambition means the potential for an equally big failure, and while that's not the case on
A Thousand Shark's Teeth, the album is sometimes too over-thought for its own good. Arguably, it's more interesting for
Worden to bring some of her high art background to a pop context, as she did on
Bring Me the Workhorse, than vice versa. As it stands,
A Thousand Shark's Teeth is beautiful, more than a little insular, and ultimately intriguing for anyone willing to listen closely. ~ Heather Phares