First there was
My Red Scare, a spare tangle of obscuro indie
folk with
Frankie Sparo's voice and guitar as its principal guides. Then there was
Arena Hostile, which was like the squelchy HAM radio version of the same album, discovered late at night like a numbers station with heart. In 2003
Sparo combines elements of both records inside
Welcome Crummy Mystics, an ambitious work recorded with the aid of fellow Montreal dweller and music crazy
Efrim Menuck (
Godspeed You Black Emperor!, etc.), as well as a gang of other collaborators. Though their approaches to songwriting are at odds, there's a valid comparison of
Sparo and
Mystics to
Mirah and her striking 2001 effort
Advisory Committee. That album found
Phil Elvrum accentuating
Mirah's music and mood with varying beds and warps of sound manipulation, and
Menuck does the same thing for
Sparo here.
"Sleds to Moderne"'s brittle guitar work and halting vocal would make it a sort of acoustic
Flying Saucer Attack, but with its bed of oh-so-subtle electronics and a well-placed aviary sample, the thing's got atmosphere to spare.
"Akzidenz Grotesk" is a different animal, leaning toward the four-track
pop assemblage of
Guided by Voices, while
"Bright Angel Park" shifts gears again, offering tonally atmospheric textures dueting with an eerie music box.
"Camera"'s brooding vocal is as bare and arresting as anything
Smog ever put to tape, and
"City as Might Have Been" features
Sparo's disjointed yet oddly evocative lyrics weaving between an urgent violin and subtle background harmonies. Fans of the
Constellation label might be thrown by
Welcome Crummy Mystics' lack of sonic weight, but it might be more rewarding for achieving the same claustrophobic mental torpor as those other bands in a considerably less busy form. Recommended for fans of anyone from
Six Organs of Admittance to
Come. ~ Johnny Loftus