hey all. this is my first time posting, but this review was at
pitchforkmedia.com.

enjoy. -love,peter
*************

Modest Mouse
The Moon & Antarctica
[Epic]
Rating: 9.8
It's not very exciting behind the scenes at Pitchfork. Writers wearing
button-down shirts with the sleeves rolled up don't hustle around a maze of
cubicles while Ryan chews out rookies in his office. We have converted no
lofts into spacious playpens loaded with iMacs and Nerf hoops. No interns
yet. (Unless Ryan's holding back on me.) Mostly we sit around discussing
music. And this isn't even done in the photogenic setting of a stoop or a
coffeeshop. We talk about music constantly on the Internet, which,
admittedly, is geeky. Plus, we're not even trying to sell anything on the
Internet, further compounding our stubbornness. (Some lady beat us to the
punch with our farming equipment site at Pitchfork.com, but we're still
looking into eRakes.com.)

Yet every so often-- whether due to astronomical occurrences, economic
fluctuations, or inherent quality cycles (which have all actually been
debated at one point)-- an album comes along that inhibits our serotonin
uptake, cleans our ears, palpitates our hearts, ignites our passion, and
justifies our existence. I've argued that this occurs approximately every
three years, due to slight financial recessions. It's that time again. At
this point, I think the world agrees on OK Computer as the last major event
in album rock. For at least a few months, the world can stop waiting for
Radiohead's next album, and start wondering how in the hell Modest Mouse
will ever top the monumental, ground-breaking, hypnotic, sublime The Moon &
Antarctica.

Somebody just snickered. Modest Mouse generate a divide between the
venerating and violent like few other bands. The latter of which currently
questions my ascertations Wipe the slate clean. You officially have not
heard Modest Mouse until you have heard their major label debut. The growth,
bravery, and confidence are staggering for a trio that most recently
hammered through a song about doing the "cockroach." Producer Brian Deck of
Red Red Meat conjures the supernatural. Layers upon layers of treated and
raw sounds blend into a thick headtrip. Piano, cello, sleighbells,
keyboards, chimes, and more can be excavated from the mix. Singing guitarist
Isaac Brock constantly obsesses over the afterlife, and with Deck's help
he's found it, far out in space and inside his clouded, scattered brain.

"3rd Planet" opens the record innocently enough. Isaac plucks a lovely
fluttering acoustic bed before he admits, "Everything that keeps us together
is falling apart," tersely summing the human condition and the theme of the
record in ten seconds. Suddenly echoing, truck-sized drums stomp over the
ebow-dripping chorus as Brock repeatedly pronounces under a sheet of reverb,
"The universe is shaped exactly like the Earth/ If you go straight long
enough you'll end up where you were." Those failing to find the brilliance
inherent in Modest Mouse at this point, please check in your Xanax at the
window and an agent will escort you to the Target music department.

By the time track two, "Gravity Rides Everything," begins with backwards
drums, strums, and plucks, it's quite evident Mouse Mouse have traveled well
beyond their past. The song's percussion relies on jacked drumstick claps
and electro-bongos as no less than five guitar tracks float on aching
melodies. Deck's hands keep the affair shimmering and clear, in what will
undoubtedly vault him into the echelon of the Fridmanns and Godriches. Laser
guitar lines and Brock's wrath blare over violins and undulating bass on the
massive "Dark Center of the Universe." Structurally, it's still classic
Modest Mouse up to this point, excepting the volume of warped effects.

"Perfect Disguise" quietly kicks off the otherworldly passage of Moon. A
chorus sighs "Broke my back" over delicate pickings, sleepy kickdrums,
accentuating banjo, and oddball guitar pings. Looping tones usher a nasty
bassline and disco rhythms as "Tiny Cities Made of Ashes" ceremoniously
kicks listener ass. Sinister vocal doubletracking bursts into crackled
shouting. Those familiar with Modest Mouse's live show will instantly
recognize this as a trademark moment for Brock screaming into his guitar
pickups. This heavy march, driven by Jeremiah Green's hissing breaks, sounds
wholly unique and creepy.

"A Different City" sits like the obvious single. Flanged riffs pump
Pixies-ish glee, in Modest Mouse's tightest punch to date. After this brief
foray into crunching pop, the stretches out to infinity on "The Cold Part."
Chiming guitar, strings, over-dubbed echoes, deteriorating machines, and
thumping drums fill a dark, beautiful void as a ghostly Brock laments, "So
long to this cold, cold part of the world." Any of Brock's prose is
instantly quotable. "Alone Down There" announces, "Hello how do you do?/ My
name is you," uncomfortably close to the inner ear. As the song crescendos
with building, buzzing guitar, Modest Mouse distills Built to Spill's
essence in two minutes. "I don't want to you to be alone down there," Brock
pleads. Angelic harmonies grant him his wish.

The epic "The Stars are Projectors" furthers the future of rock in grand
gestures. Shifting between acoustic interludes and searing guitar over
pounding drums, lyrics postulate the Descartian notion that our world is
merely an elaborate dreamscape. Pretty sharp for Northwestern punks. The
pace soon accelerates as the song swirls into a sonic twister. Through
studio trickery, warbling drums sound as if winds howl outside, prying the
roof from above, to snatch you into a maw of shrill violins and sheer
feedback.

A stripped death ballad peppered with accordion provides perfect comedown on
"Wild Packs of Family Dogs." Thus begins the third movement of the record.
"Paper Thin Walls" pops along in blue-collar fashion on cowbells and and
woodblocks like fIREHOSE, while still injecting the haunted flourishes of
the album. If Nirvana played folk with Massive Attack it might end up a bit
like "I Came as a Rat." Standard power chords melt into astral tape
manipulation. The calm, beautiful respite before the closing snarl comes in
"Lives." "It's hard to remember you live before you die," Brock sings over
weeping strings. "My hell comes from inside," he reminds. Back comes the
resigned aggression. "Life Like Weeds" jangles and bows with still more
poignancy. Most grand, expansive, experimental albums of this sort are
expected to end with a quiet snuff. Modest Mouse explode into the noisiest,
fastest piece to close the record. "What People are Made Of" cuts abruptly
on fuzzed bass, clashing cymbals, and attacking guitars-- an ideal ending
for a record centered on death and the inability to understand.

So I've just taken you through the entire album. As a fan, I know this sort
detail is expected of hallmark albums. In anticipation of the next
masterpiece, we all soak up as much info as we can get. Getting geeked up is
part of the drama. For the first time, Modest Mouse craft an album, not a
collection of songs. That they manage to go beyond any other rock band out
there is staggering. The sequencing weaves a dramatic ebb and flow of
emotion. Every song is packed with fantastic sounds that each reach out for
space and salvation. The band is now precise and broad. Eric Judy's fluid
bass quietly escorts the ear subconsciously through the appropriate moods.
Green's drumming is playful and inventive. There is no way Modest Mouse will
ever pull this off live. The space, equipment, and personnel needed seems
limitless. Yet this scale rockets the album instantly into Vahalla.

An intoxicating mix of uncertainty and confidence, The Moon & Antarctica
constructs hallow approximations of heaven, hell, and deep space-- most of
which exist vividly in Isaac Brock's questioning mind. OK Computer must be
mentioned, for Modest Mouse just got invited to the same club. They can chat
existentially in the sauna. But unlike's Radiohead's unease at technology
and quickening society, Modest Mouse grapple with the general conjectures of
humankind. The title aptly entails the whole of the album. Sometimes the
most spooky, alien places are not too far off. Similarly, our immediate
surroundings and internal environment feel even more otherworldly. Modest
Mouse seek salvation in God, death, and relationships. Fortunately, the rest
of us can sometimes find it in records.

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