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A band as unique, brash,
and uncompromising as the Animal Collective
has no problem carrying those same traits over
into a startling live show. The band’s mix
of pop and noise live perfectly captures their
natural, child-like enthusiasm for sound in all
its forms, and lets the audience feel as if they’re
experiencing music for the first time.
On the current tour, the band
brought along three of its four members: Avey
Tare, Panda Bear,
and Geologist, piling the stage
with keyboards and samplers. Avey Tare did most
of the singing in his oddly tuneful voice, while
Panda Bear countered with an ethereal falsetto,
looping them to create a floating melody over
pounding drums or glitchy electronic sounds
from Geologist.
At this performance, they
played a batch of songs from their new album,
Strawberry Jam, which
will be released in September of this year.
Unlike 2004’s organic Sung Tongs
or the full-band rock of 2005’s Feels,
Strawberry Jam’s songs are built around
loops, samples, and electronics. Earlier albums
utilized a similar set up, but now the band
has mixed the tribal drums, chanting, and call-and-response
vocals that were prevalent on the last couple
albums, adding more electronics to create something
brand new once again.
The first three-quarters of
the show was Strawberry Jam, with each
song building on repetitive musical figures
and vocal loops, shattered only by Avey Tare’s
manic thrashing at a cymbal or a piercing shout
from either him or Panda Bear. The tribal element
of the band’s music is on full display
live, with the audience bobbing along, often
clapping in time, until the breaking point when
the band’s ambient noise floods over the
crowd.
Avey Tare and Panda Bear’s
harmonies were amazingly pristine, often creating
the melodic core of a song when placed over
top of the rhythmic elements from Geologist’s
digital trickery to hand drums. Avey Tare moves
constantly, dancing and bouncing to the beats
as if he’s the only one in the room. The
second portion of the show was a set of older
songs, with the lilting “Loch Raven”
and frantic “We Tigers” being the
highlights.
After seeing them live, I’m
still no closer to explaining to someone what
Animal Collective’s music is all about
or what it sounds like to my ears, but I guarantee
they’re the only ones out there doing
it.
-Josh Davis
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