Der Dodo war ein etwa einen Meter großer, flugunfähiger Vogel, der ausschließlich auf den Inseln Mauritius und Réunion i...

The Dodos - Carrier


















Der Dodo war ein etwa einen Meter großer, flugunfähiger Vogel, der ausschließlich auf den Inseln Mauritius und Réunion im Indischen Ozean vorkam und sich von vergorenen Früchten ernährte und auf dem Boden nistete. Der Dodo starb um 1690, weniger als 100 Jahre nach seiner Entdeckung, aus.  Als er 1865 im Roman "Alice im Wunderland" von Lewis Carroll erwähnt wurde, stieg erstmals das Interesse am Dodo, von dem weltweit kein vollständiges Skelett erhalten geblieben ist.

The Dodos sind ein amerikanisches Duo, das aus Meric Long und Logan Kroeber besteht und 2005 in San Francisco gegründet wurde. 2012 verstarb plötzlich und unerwartet Christopher Reimer, der das Duo auf Tourneen als Gitarrist begleitete.

"Carrier" ist das fünfte Album der Dodos, das in einer auf 700 Stück limitierten Version auch in hellblauem Vinyl veröffentlicht wurde, zwischen Indierock und Folk pendelt, 11 Titel beinhaltet und 41 Minuten läuft. Das Album wurde in John Vanderslices Tiny Telephone Studios aufgenommen, ihr langjähriger Sound-Engineer John Askew wurde durch Ian und Jay Pellicci ersetzt und sieben Lieder entstanden in Kooperation mit dem Magik*Magik Orchestra. Als erste Single wurde der Song "Confidence" ausgewählt:   


Carrier, finally, brings that emotional subtext to the front, and the result is a Dodos record that is thrillingly translucent and crushingly intimate, almost uncomfortably so. It’s love and loss, as straightforward as you please.
(Sputnikmusic)

In the circumstances The Dodos could have made an introspective and unwelcoming record, one that took few risks and stuck to the duo’s signature sound – but that would have been a disservice to the influence Chris Reimer clearly had on Long and Kroeber. Instead, Carrier is a joy and we have an album that’s up there with the most moving and stirring records of 2013.
(The Line Of Best Fit)


The result is an intricately variegated album torn between two countervailing threads: heartache and rejuvenation. Juxtaposing feelings of loss brought on by Reimer’s unexpected death with the atmosphere of dynamic experimentation he helped cultivate while touring with The Dodos, the ebullient spunk anchoring Carrier’s first half melts into a bitter morass of alienation (“Stranger”), bereavement (“Death”), and disaster (“Destroyer”) as the LP unfolds.

Opening ditty “Transformer” ripples with coruscating guitar lines and Long’s seductive whisper, as the singer nonchalantly grapples with some utterly unanswerable questions (“What does a song hold?/ What is love?”). Concocting an ambiance of optimism, The Dodos build into a peppy instrumental with the snare drum smack of percussionist Logan Kroeber.

The frenzied guitar work of “Confidence” conveys a sense of control. Elusive and warm, Long purrs: “Con-fidence, con-fid-en-en-en-ce.” Brimming with detachment and wry sarcasm, “Substance” playfully knocks interpersonal communication as flawed and essentially expendable (“Words we never said/ Do we really need them?”). Alongside Kroeber’s jolting cymbals, the Magik*Magik Orchestra piles on a slew of triumphant horns that seamlessly usher Long’s bucolic fingerpicking.

Switching gears abruptly with brooding cut “Stranger”, The Dodos highlight the stinging awkwardness plaguing outcasts and solitarians everywhere. Simultaneously invisible and out of his element, the song’s protagonist tentatively ponders, “As a stranger, do you see me?” On the understated and tactfully sparse “Death”, Long’s phantasmal guitar melts over whimpering violins to elucidate the agony of losing a friend to the great abyss (“Death, what can be worse?/ If I took your place, would it hurt?”). The up-tempo “Destroyer”, which chronicles the decay of unity and love, touts some of the album’s best lyrical moments. Blasting a “dark and twisted, cold and gifted” ex-lover for demanding more than one person could ever hope to provide, the singer flippantly and condescendingly jabs, “And tears they come, like a geyser/ Power pressure, building up/ I’m not the one to stop it.”

Yet again gravitating towards the themes of loss and isolation on closer “The Ocean”, the band hauntingly echoes a single rhetorical question atop an incessantly thumping bass drum and silvery, wilting strings. As if under the impression that he’ll ultimately be rewarded with an enlightened answer, the singer drones ad nauseam, “Why won’t you be where I want you to be?” Unprepared to let go of his erstwhile companion, the singer hangs on this line as if it’s the last memory of his departed friend. Though Long’s fragile and scarred pleadings are likely addressed to Reimer, the universality of his inquiry renders it applicable to anyone that’s passed away too soon, leaving friends and family behind.

Carrier is weighed down by back end filler. Sluggish, down-tempo waltz “Holidays” is one of several throwaway songs, though its blasé middle ground serves as something of an interlude between the albums’ breezy cuts and those dealing with comparatively depressive subjects. “Family” is a lyrically insipid and instrumentally flat number, while irritatingly repetitious “The Current” builds and retreats without ever really getting anywhere interesting.
(Consequence Of Sound)


5 Kommentare:

  1. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tvD4fRHstuU

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  2. In diesem Zusammenhang sei mal fachfremd auf das Buch "Die letzten ihrer Art" von Douglas Adams und Mark Carwardine hingewiesen. Sehr lesenswert! http://www.alles-ueber.com/2008/11/05/die-letzten-ihrer-art-douglas-adams-und-mark-carwardine/

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  3. "Die letzten ihrer Art" treffen auf Stephen Fry (Erzähler im Dodo-Clip) in der sehenswerten BBC-Serie "Last Chance To See". Für 8,- auf DVD bei amazon! Auch als Buch erhältlich.

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8a_dBIeerew

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  4. Zum Aussterben zu gut.

    6,5 Punkte

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