Wednesday, September 15, 2010

The L Magazine - New York .

Of MontrealFalse Priest (Polyvinyl)

Kevin Barnes malady has come on slowly, like cases of chronic falsetto so often, so tragically, do. He got to the conspicuous R&B mindset of Of Montreals 10th full-length, False Priest, in half-steps, with his 00s albums progressively lending more and more time to 70s funk workouts and silly, slutty Prince-via-Beck lover-man croons.

That was slow enough to have in the context of something like 2007s cracked, glam career highlight, Hissing Fauna, Are You the Destroyer? Vintage Parliament-style funk was always pretty glam, what with the sparkling pants and spaceships and all. A twelvemonth after the booty-shake quotient was upped, but the the resulting Skeletal Lamping was such a scattered, yet only fleetingly awesome jumble that every stylistic turn was slightly more probable to develop patience-trying dreck than a world-class hook (the early chorus to "Plastis Wafer," for example, is an all-time classic lust-declaration amid a lost-at-sea drone). False Priest fully reverses Hissing Faunas ratio of glitter-guitar to trunk-funk, and as such is already being hailed as a variety of triumphant climax, a background influence now in full bloom. But listening to "Care a Tourist," hearing the strained high notes Barnes uses to wheeze the clunky psychobabble snippet, "You-ooo fet-i-shize the arch-e-types," and all the unjust things that have been said about his run for the preceding few years suddenly seem like prophecy just wait to be fulfilled. Its over-wordy, over-labored, and rasping at a spot in his career where hes experienced enoughto phone it in.

How far out-of-step Barnes is with the real cutting-edge of R&B was exposed earlierthis year by his sore-thumb songwriting contribution to Janelle Monaes otherwise consistently thrilling Arch Android. All concluded that album, she defines what R&B means in 2010 and, as it happened, spastic nerd shit strains the definition. Guest turns from Monae and Solange Knowles feature prominently on False Priest. Both sing Barnes words with a graceful professionalism that outshines his mania. As cunning as "Sex Karma" is to have Beyonces kid-sis singing the "Ring the Alarm"-subverting line, "You are my only luxury item, anyone try to buy you, Ill fight em," and as taking as her girlish warmth makes his certifiably catchy chorus, when you hear that high-concept weirdo sitting uneasily next to her effortless glide, the strain still ends up as showing A that he cant quite hang in this genre. Hes got soul power, sure, but hes not a soul singer.

Barnes is too talented a songwriter to put out an album containing nothing to recommend. First single "Coquet Coquette" is really, really good, maybe his tightest distillation of riff-drunk glam yet. "Famine Affair" is restless in an exciting way, switching from mopey 80s guitar through a disco detour back to an enormous 90s-alt-rock crunch, all in serving of a deflated and relatable lyric. That both highlights feature a more relaxed, natural vocal quality than the castrati-on-coke funk tracks is nothing like a coincidence. Of Montreals four-album run to here has contained an amazing string of far-flung pop moments that make him lifelong cred. The tighter aesthetic range and more consistently overbearing persona ofFalse Priest is an albatross, nota victory-lap.

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