...according to our Brian on Thu 26 Mar, 2009.
Peter, Bjorn & Freddy (it's John you silly man - Brett) have a new album out. Apparently I can whistle 'Young Folks' note-perfect according to our Ant. I don't know how Roger Whitaker friendly their new waxing 'Living Thing' is but there's an emphasis on strange electronics, experimental vocal harmonising & minimal drum patterns. It sounds like they've been infected by the cult of the "Animal Collective", a little heard of bunch of trail-blazing yank kids who staple the essence of 5am rave pioneers Underworld onto the face of the Beach Boys. I saw them last night & it was like a fucking church service for the day-glo set. Fantastic. Anyway, back to Paul, Bryn & Josie, this is forward thinking Swedish pop with integrity & inventive qualities. The sound is quite stripped back & electronic. I like the sparsity & atmosphere of it all. The songs seem to have an easy pace, like 'Just the Past' reminds me of early New Order and OMD, minimal synths & a searching vocal. I just love the new single 'Nothing to Worry About', like a cross between The Go! Team & Beck, catchy as a virulent flu bug. The majority of this odd album may confuse folks who like their more swinging retro-indie pop but they're obviously progressive musicians who think outside the box. So future electro blues-pop or maddeningly infectious disco chunks, If you like your Scando-indie then I'm sure they'll be an offering or two on this platter to take your fancy.You might have heard of Peter Bjorn and John.
They are the Swedish trio that released a certain single called “Young Folks” in 2006, the one with the inimitable whistling intro and shuffling drums and the huge chorus which was so clever and tongue in cheek but at the same time so simple, personal and direct and universal that it won over listeners across the world, got covered by the varied likes of Nena and Kanye West, and even showed up on the zeitgeist-defining “Gossip Girl”. The accompanying album, “Writer’s Block”, was a heart melting collection of 11 perfectly formed pop classics which went on to become an indie hit.
What you may not have heard is their more experimental side. As befitting a band comprising a “hardcore fusion” obsessive (John) and jazz-pianist (Bjorn) in their ranks, there has always been a wilder, more playful undertow bubbling away just beneath the shiny pop surface. Just look at “Seaside Rock”, their limited edition, low-key 2008 release which was pretty much the polar opposite of “Writer’s Block”: mostly instrumental, and filled with beautiful, sparse elegies to their isolated childhoods.
Which brings us neatly to “Living Thing”, their follow up to “Writer’s Block” proper.
There was always going to be chatter as to how Peter Bjorn and John would follow up a pop phenomenon. Would they try to replicate their earlier success? Or go out of their way to release a wilfully difficult new album? In actual fact, what they have done is a bit of both – and neither – all at the same time. Bolstered by the band’s production, the first taster of the album, “Lay it Down”, which snuck out onto the blogosphere at the end of 2008, was a delightfully off-kilter riposte, a jaunty flying-V in the faces of people who thought they’d had the band all figured out, with a harsh, treated vocal lifelessly intoning the threatening refrain of “Hey, shut the f**k up boy, you’re starting to piss me off” before abruptly giving way to an anthemic, full-bodied singalong, the sort which will send the masses scurrying to any self-respecting dancefloor on a Saturday night.
The rest of the album walks a similar tightrope of melody and mayhem. “I Want You!” is quite possibly one of the loveliest things they have ever done. And then, of course, there are the brilliant surprises that you weren’t expecting. “The Feeling” is the grand entrance to the album, and as far as opening tracks go, it’s one hell of a statement of intent – with drums crashing in like waves on a beach, heavy distortion vibrating and, of course, shards of delicate beauty poking through the carefully controlled chaos. “Just the Past” is a pumped-up, rough around the edges, would be disco gem, and “I’m Losing My Mind” is by turns angular and heart-swelling. And then there is the Kanye West-approved, official first single, “Nothing to Worry About”, a glorious rollercoaster ride of lolloping beats and children’s choirs, and the furthest thing from “Young Folks” you could possibly find.
“Living Thing” pulses with life, it is bursting at the seams with energy and vitality, and shot through with warmth and excitement and wonder.
TRACKLISTING:
1) The Feeling
2) It Don’t Move Me
3) Just the Past
4) Nothing to Worry
About
5) I’m Losing My Mind
6) Living Thing
7) I Want You!
8) Lay It
Down
9) Stay This Way
10) Blue Period Picasso
11) 4 Out Of 5
12) Last
Night
Be the first to review this record. Best reviewer each month gets £10 off their next order!