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{Too Pure}
The past few Stereolab albums have felt a little overstuffed and underdone. Oft times, the band jumps tempos and rhythm tracks before they've reached their natural conclusion. It's as if the band is so full of these great ideas that they want to get all of them out at once, no matter how fragmented they end up sounding.
For this, the (for lack of a better word) blame appears to fall squarely on the shoulders of Tim Gane, the prinicipal musicsmilth in Stereolab. At least that's the impression I'm left with after listening to another fantastic solo effort by Stereolab's co-songwriter/lyricist Laetitia Sadier. Recording under the name Monade, Sadier has, over the last few years, released a series of albums that feel looser and seem to be freed of the retro constraints that Gane and his band place on themselves.
Monstre Cosmic, the most recent effort by Sadier and her now steady backing band, is her best work to date as a solo artist. It does show the influence of the same artists/producers that have marked much of Stereolab's latter day work (The Free Design, Krystof Komeda, Os Mutantes, Neu!, to name a few), but Monade doesn't let them govern how the song is written. Instead, Sadier uses them as starting points from which to draw her own brightly colored pictures with.
The best of these songs, though, are the ones that take advantage of Sadier's unbelievably pristine voice, one that is rivaled in clarity and an understanding of her voice's restraints by Astrud Gilberto. She still manages to surprise, though, as on "Etoile," when Sadier reaches into an upper register that she has never used before on record, adding a dreamy effect to an already dreamy mid-tempo song.
Sadier's compositional skills are in full bloom on Cosmic as well, using a mid-tempo, almost jazzy shuffle on many of the songs here. There are some intriguing shifts in the spirit of songs — "Entre Chein Le Loup" starts off a quiet, string driven mood piece but ends up sounding fitful, driven as it is by drums and clanking xylophone — but these transitions often feel, as in the case of the gorgeous, shape changing "Invitation," natural and inevitable.
It would be tempting, especially considering how solid all of her solo efforts have been, to petition on Sadier's behalf to stick to Monade, but as has been obvious since the band's early days, Stereolab needs the anchoring presence of her vocals and ideas. But with a solo album as good as this, us fans can't help but play a quick game of "What if?" before readying ourselves for whatever Sadier, Gane, and co. have to throw at us next.
1 Imaginary Shrie said on March 13, 2008
What I've heard of this album is just a rehashing of Stereolab. Which is great of course, but I was possibly hoping for something a little fresher?
2 Bob said on March 13, 2008
I don't hear it like that at all. I think it would be impossible for Sadier to completely free herself of the same influences that are so evident in Stereolab, but I think she does some very interesting stuff with them on this record.
3 elle said on March 13, 2008
Oh my, I love Stereolab. I had no idea about Monade! Thanks, Bob
4 Imaginary Shrie said on March 13, 2008
Bob, I agree. There is no possibly way that she could distance herself entirely, nor should she. I just think it would have been great to see those influences but then hear something remarkable, and different, come out of this album. Maybe my expectations are too high. But I do think it's good.... it's just not far enough from Stereolab for me to listen to it in place of say, "Emperor Tomato Ketchup."
5 Bob said on March 14, 2008
I hear you there, Shrie. I tend to give the folks in Stereolab a pass on most anything they put their names on...but that could simply because I'm a super Stereolab fan.
I think what would be cool is if someone like Stephin Merritt or Burt Bacharach crafted a bunch of songs just for her voice. I think about the awesome backing vocal stuff she has done for Blur and Mouse on Mars and even Common, and I think that stretching herself a bit away from the '60s ye ye pop stuff might make for a very cool album.
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