Obey

Obey

by Exploded View
Obey

Obey

by Exploded View

Vinyl LP(Long Playing Record - Colored Vinyl)

$21.99 
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Overview

On Exploded View's self-titled debut, the band's stream-of-consciousness post-punk drew a significant part of its impact from its live recording process, which emphasized the album's dreamlike flow and surprising tangents. The band -- now the trio of Annika Henderson, Hugo Quezada, and Martin Thulin -- brings a little more order to the proceedings on Obey. The trio tracked the album in a more traditional fashion at Thulin and Quezada's Mexico City studio, but fortunately, the more controlled environment doesn't diminish Exploded View's evocative power at all. If anything, Obey draws listeners into their lucid dreams more completely as they explore the costs of conformity and resisting it. The band reframes its surreal racket as an expression of the struggle to escape traditions that are actually vicious cycles: "Rant"'s smothering electronics and tireless beat evoke an out-of-control assembly line, and though the darkly funky "Raven Raven"'s descending keyboard hook and dubby beats come close to Exploded View's offhanded cool, it casts an ominous shadow that's hard to shake. As striking as Obey's more abstract songs are -- the title track reaches mystical heights as Henderson croons and whispers over a dense fog of synths and drums as big as cauldrons -- the album's most direct songs are among its finest. As a member of Exploded View, Henderson has become a less detached presence than she was as a solo artist, and the ghostly hints of empathy that lurked around the band's debut float to Obey's surface. On strangely elegant and empowering songs such as "Gone Tomorrow"'s gentle nudge to seize the moment and the tender psych-folk ballad "Letting Go of Childhood Dreams," Henderson and company rival Broadcast, Stereolab, and Virginia Wing's mastery of airy, philosophical pop. Elsewhere, she combines the personal and political in her songwriting more naturally and compellingly than ever before. "You showed him once and you showed him twice/That some things can't be undone," Henderson sings on "Open Road" as a bubbling synth and mournful acoustic strumming seem to push the song's protagonist closer to her destination -- or at least farther away from her troubles. On "Dark Stains," she's sympathetic, if not exactly forgiving, as she watches someone close to her fight to change, and the way the track's momentum snowballs each time she repeats the mantra-like chorus "but I believe you" makes for the album's most life-affirming moment. At once more deliberate and more liberated than their debut, with Obey Exploded View challenge their listeners to be as free as as their music sounds. ~ Heather Phares

Product Details

Release Date: 10/05/2018
Label: SACRED BONES
UPC: 0843563105368

Tracks

  1. Lullaby
  2. Open Road
  3. Dark Stains
  4. Gone Tomorrow
  5. Obey
  6. Sleepers
  7. Letting Go of Childhood Dreams
  8. Raven Raven
  9. Come on Honey
  10. Rant

Album Credits

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