Sunday, September 13, 2015

Modest Mouse - Strangers to Ourselves




            In my teen years, Modest Mouse was a name I recognized, but other than the occasional radio tidbit of “Float On,” their music never really made its way to me. It is only in the past year that I started exploring their catalogue, and only then after the incessant and insistent recommendations of two of my bandmates. At first, their eclectic sound palate was too much for me to stomach, but soon I couldn’t get enough of the eccentricity with which they approached their art. A few months ago, I began spinning Strangers to Ourselves, their newest full-length, and while its fifteen completely unique songs come as no surprise, I am still reeling from how cohesively those songs fit together as a whole.
            It is a feat in itself to include fifteen fully-explored tracks on an album, but in Strangers to Ourselves, Modest Mouse collects an amazingly diverse palate of sounds and shapes them through the machine of their musicianship. Although most of the compositions are structured around Isaac Brock’s distinctive guitar melodies, their driving force comes from the fluid drumming of Jeremiah Green; his shuffling dance groove moves the lead single “Lampshades on Fire,”[1] while his crashing cymbals coalesce effortlessly with the screaming guitar lead in “Be Brave.” And while Isaac’s guitar snaps loud and proud in tracks like “Shit in Your Cut” or “Ansel,” just as often he shares that treble space with keyboards and textures, even blending the two timbres into one melodic image for the album’s eponymous opener.


            With their plethora of exotic instruments, Modest Mouse works hard to make each song on Strangers to Ourselves a unique listening experience. As Isaac puts it, “one thing that we consistently do is inconsistently write types of songs. There’s no one way about it for us.”[2] Every tune is approached from a different angle or with a different energy: “Coyotes” rocks a gentle acoustic feel, “Wicked Campaign” is loaded with humming guitar and reverby vocals, and “Sugar Boats” rollicks about on a manic gypsy piano riff. The groaning dance of “Pistol” is entirely inane on first listen, but the maddening dark vocals and wretching guitar coda paint a schizoid picture that epitomizes the lyrical perspective of serial killer Andrew Cunanan.[3] The band is fearless in their sonic endeavors, using every resource available to create exclusive atmospheres for each tune.
            Modest Mouse’s willingness to wander between genres while remaining catchy is admirable, a quality owed in no small part to Isaac’s ear-grabbing hooks. While almost every tune on Strangers to Ourselves features some aspect of pop sensibility, no track works that sensibility harder than “The Ground Walks, with Time in a Box.” With this tune, Modest Mouse takes all the tropes of popular music and puts them to the test: the song grooves on for over 6 minutes (twice as long as the most daring Top 40 tune), and while they maintain a danceable beat for most of that time, the band can’t resist devolving into pure noise for a few bars in the bridge.


Even Isaac’s endearing and fun vocal melody, which is practically married to his guitar, is a vehicle used to put all of humanity in its place as a group of bad party guests on a beautiful planet.[4] By twisting all the right ingredients, “The Ground Walks, with Time in a Box” defies the very conventions it is built around, reinforcing Isaac’s statement that, despite their regular forays into ear-friendly music, “we’re not a pop band. I’m not sure what kind of band we are, and I like it that way.”[5]
            From an instrumental perspective, Strangers to Ourselves is truly all over the place, ranging from soft to loud, scream to whisper, and everywhere in between. But in spite of their disconnect in sound, these fifteen tracks are unified by dominant and thorough lyrical themes. With the exception of perhaps two tracks, the record explores some aspect of humanity’s relationship with the planet, specifically our abuse of it. Isaac constantly refers to humans as “strangers” or “tourists,” even bluntly naming us as “giant ol’ monsters” who behave “like some serial killers” in “Coyotes.”[6] In “Pups to Dust,” he asserts our dissociation with the line “We don’t belong here, we were just born here,” and explores our proclivity to skew our self-image: “The way we feel about what we do is by who has watched us.”[7] Even with the very title of the record, Isaac uses his writing to brutally pull back the curtain on our true nature, forcing us to account for our very presence in this world.  


            One song that heavily explores this theme of estrangement from our own home is “TheTortoise and the Tourist.” Amid crunching bass and a squealing guitar drenched in warm reverb, Isaac regales the parable of an eternal tortoise with a shell “covered in jewels” that knew “the world through all its histories / and the universe and its mysteries.” When the tortoise meets a man and offers him infinite wisdom, the human instead slaughters the tortoise before walking off “with a song on his lips,” the jeweled shell secure under his arm. Isaac’s tale in no uncertain terms highlights the greed and ignorance of man, who wanders through his life blissfully unaware of the destruction left in his wake, treating this life like a trivial vacation when in fact this is all he has. With “The Tortoise and the Tourist,” Modest Mouse takes on the role of an elder spinning a dark fairy tale, in hopes that the moral of the narrative will leave its mark on future generations.


            With its multifaceted instrumentation and deep lyrical themes, it is hardly a surprise that Strangers to Ourselves took so long to see completion. Aside from having to fund the endeavor themselves, apparently it took Modest Mouse three tries to get the recording sessions off the ground, with most of their two previous attempts (one including Krist Novoselic on bass, and the other featuring production from Outkast’s Big Boi) being scrapped or shelved.[8] On top of that, the band went through four producers total during the recording process, and also spent considerable time trying to find a replacement for former bassist Eric Judy, whose duties were ultimately split among members Russel Higbee, Tom Peloso, and Lisa Molinaro.[9] [10]
            But as one spin will tell you, Strangers to Ourselves is a record well-worth the wait. Amid its eclectic sounds and wavering tempos, this record is stuffed with the heartfelt intention of a group of musicians who, despite missteps and lineup changes, continue to amaze and innovate with their music. Modest Mouse affixes keen writing to a plethora of sonic arrangements and ideas, giving their fans new and old a listening experience that is original, honest, and most importantly, a ton of fun. Strangers to Ourselves is an odyssey of sentiment and song in itself, but also a sign of things to come from this act, and I for one am beyond excited to follow their journey. 

Tunes to Check Out:
1) The Tortoise and the Tourist
2) Pups to Dust
3) The Ground Walks, with Time in a Box





No comments:

Post a Comment