Deerhoof are the Romper Room armageddon, Raggedy Ann
poking brush into a wood chipper, Big Bird soaring
over the looted ruins of Baghdad. Their chunky-liquid
sound is like a radish dipped in honey. The trick
seems fairly simple: put some jagged guitars and
thundering drums under the chirpy-girly voice of
Satomi Matsuzaki, and let the dissonance loose. Yoko
Ono used to attempt something similar, and LiLiPUT are
also an obvious forebear. But their central influence
seems to be the Shaggs, whose unembarrassed
make-it-up-as-we-go-along amateurism ended up putting
earache primitivism onto the aesthetic map.
Last year's Reveille was an organic
masterpiece, a free-flowing jumble of larynx, tongue,
and noise, tweetering daintily between piety and
damnation, occasionally crashing to earth, always
trying to take flight again. The bluesy no-wave was
compelling in itself, but the part you remember best
is the voice of Satomi Matsuzaki, a strange,
exhilarating evocation of a Siren singing artless
melodies to herself as she wanders the cliffs alone.
Apple O' knots up the magic of Reveille
and then trails it out into a series of individual
songs, all lined up in a row. There's not as
much chaos here, but that's no surprise (inspired
anarchy ain't easy to reconjure every time out: just
ask Sonic Youth). But everything else remains intact:
resonant distilled-English lyrics, scratchy-noisy
guitars, thundering drums, and Satomi. Rather than try
to recreate the messy conceptual flow of
Reveille, Deerhoof instead concentrate on
making a really great record. So no, it's not another
masterpiece, but it is a stunning and memorable batch
of songs. Hell, four of them are new classics by my
reckoning.
Track one is "Dummy Discards a Heart", and there's the
album's theme for you. Love as primal force, sometimes
yucky and barren, but usually about shouting and
cartwheels rather than flowers and poems. The twin
guitars of Chris Cohen and John Dieterich bounce along
with each other in a trebly-buzzy Carrie-Brownstein
style as Satomi chirps, "Sing to the East / Sing to
the West / Sing to the one you love the best". A
stunning opener, more a pop tune (albeit a noisy,
difficult one) than an art experiment. Its followup,
"Heart Failure" is even poppier, with bell-like
guitars and lines like "Heart is dim now" and "Love
drop feeling can stop" generating the theme. This song
also demonstrates that Greg Saunier is a magnificent
drummer, the Ziggy Modeliste of no-wave. His
thundering kit -- seemingly random, kinda jazzy --
circles around the "beat" rather than hitting it
dead-on. He trails slightly behind the song, urging it
forward, rather than leading it with the martial
tenacity of ordinary drumwork. In almost every
Deerhoof tune, you gotta keep your ear on that
crazy-spastic Saunier because maybe this shit is the
future of pop rhythm.
Some other crazy-love highlights are "Flower" (a
childish melody, a dinging bell, Saunier as devil's
hound) and "Panda Panda Panda" (destined to be a live
favorite: "I like panda / Bye bye panda / Panda
road."), both of which have half-serious lyrics that
are part Gertrude Stein, part infant board-book.
"Flower" is especially great, as some sneaky
significance pops into the couplet "I come over / I
take over", hardly the innocent babblings of a
bell-dinging Bettie-Boop type. The instrumental "My
Diamond Star Car" is also stupendous, a
lightning-swift axe-battle that makes no-wave sound
like a party!
Things do slow down a bit at times. "Apple Bomb", for
example, is a flat-out majestic ballad, kinda pretty
and harmless, but not the sort of thing you'd cue up
voluntarily when getting your Deerhoof fix. I do like
the nice touch of having a singsong chorus go "Bomb
bomb bomb, bomb bomb bomb" though, and the guitars do
rave up quite beautifully at points. "Adam + Eve
Connection", another ballad, has the interesting
feature of beginning with noisy Creation (ungodly
noise) and then jerking to a halt in the Garden of
Eden, with flamenco guitar and a melodic
whisper-melody duet between Satomi and Greg Saunier.
Adam and Eve connection, okay I get it. Yeah yeah, I
know what you're thinking. But unlike on
Reveille, it seems that they're sticking with
intentionally bad song titles here. And thus we have
"Dinner for Two", a dreamy interlude which seems
useless, though maybe it's a good transition in their
live set, who knows.
Leaving aside "Flower" and "Dummy Discards a Heart",
there are two other songs here that I consider to be
new classics. "Sealed With A Kiss", despite it's
title, is straight urgent politics: "Stop the man at
the top / Stop the flag at the top / Stop the drop on
the map. / Citizen." It's a surprisingly artificial
arrangement, with martial rhythms (I don't think
Saunier is playing live on this one) and sampled
trombones giving an almost robotic feel to Satomi's
voice, as if she's Malibu Stacy newly endowed with
consciousness. Strange and kinda pretty. Even better
is "L'Amour Stories" a shamelessly hooky creation that
refers directly to the album's title (and theme):
"What's that core on the floor. / What the devil was
that for." It begins with a jangly-guitar haunted
chanteuse, then erupts every now and then into an
optimistic axe-driven chorus ("Try to lift him up for
me") that's hard to describe but impossible to forget.
And the way Satomi bravely tries to hold her notes,
pushing them higher and higher like a demented
Streisand toward the end: pure bliss. Really noisy and
grating bliss, sure, but then this is a Deerhoof
album, isn't it?
Apple O' is a wonderful album by a band that's
created an entirely unique noise out of old Shaggs
LP's and the San Francisco fog. And the theme of it
all is love, so buy it before Spring is over . . .
17 April 2003