/>
musicOMH
home / features / albums / live / classical / blog
Facebook Twitter
search:
album reviews  

Menomena - Mines

(City Slang) UK release date: 9 August 2010
4.5 stars
by Andrew Burgess
Menomena - Mines

buy Menomena MP3s or CDs

Spotify Menomena on Spotify

Portland, Oregon trio Menomena take a lot of disjointed loops and tear them apart, spin them round and reconstruct them. It's a bit of musical puff-puff-pass, with each band member contributing something and feeding the data into a band-built looping computer program. Sounds alarmingly avant garde, right? And perhaps it is, in theory, but Menomena come across as surprisingly accessible and pop-oriented, even in the midst of all their computerised hyperactivity.

Mines, the long-awaited product of a rocky three years of silence, finds the band picking up where 2007's Friend And Foe left off in a lot of ways. But Mines stands on its own apart from its near-classic predecessor. Here, Menomena have managed something altogether remarkable: They've created an organic album of wide spaces and varied orchestration with almost no ghost-trail to lead back to their experimental creative process.

Indeed, Mines sounds very much like the result of intensely meticulous, carefully collaborative songwriting, if a bit schizophrenic in its direction. But here, apparent lack of focus lends to the album's sense of collaboration, and its overall wideness of scope. Menomena are avant garde the same way TV On The Radio or Modest Mouse are avant garde; the music is truest when experimentalism gives way to deeply affecting musicality and an impeccable sense of melody. And on Mines, Menomena sound truer than they have before.

Queen Black Acid opens Mines with a subdued clean guitar and a bass-drum quality that would make John Bonham proud. "I get so caught up in my ways, sometimes I forget the simple plains," is the lyric that opens the album, and it's a fitting thesis for what follows. In this case, Menomena's "ways" are their experimental recording process, but amid all the loops and sonic distraction (often in the form of horns, strings, glockenspiel, and auxiliary percussion), simplicity shines through, the way it should in a good pop record.

Lead single, TAOS rocks harder than anything else here, with angular near-grunge guitar riffing and explosive drumming, broken by the occasional pocket symphony, and eventually stabbed by a horn section that sounds ripped from a lost Stax 45.

Dirty Cartoons stands out for its earnest lyricism, which focuses on attempts to "go home," and its fantastically disjointed percussion. Here background vocals are applied to excellent effect, and a baritone saxophone sounds unexpectedly in the open spaces. Tithe features a xylophone-piano-guitar interplay that shouldn't work, but does work beautifully despite itself.

Oh Pretty Boy, You're Such A Big Boy centres lyrically on fear of showing one's age, and the confession that "your love, oh my love, is just not enough." The left-hand piano run plinks menacingly, cementing the foundation for an Alan Parsons Project synthesized freakout. Mines closes with Intil, an emotional and dramatic piano ballad, closing the whole thing in grand style. It's a song about the dissolution of a relationship ("I never thought I'd lie, but you don't want to know"), but here Menomena have struck an archetypal balance; this one could be about you or anyone.

Despite its experimental genesis, Mines is an incredibly relatable indie-pop gem. All the hummingbird hyperactivity of its creation has been spread around the soundfield, lending the album's straightforward songcraft an air of distinct importance and impossible gravity. Mines hides innumerable secrets in its layers, and it rewards both casual and obsessive revisiting.



Comments

related articles
ALBUM: Menomena - Mines
ALBUM: Menomena - Friend And Foe
coming soon
Ital - Hive Mind Emeli Sandé - Our Version Of Events Gotye - Making Mirrors Shearwater - Animal Joy
recent releases
Leonard Cohen - Old Ideas Lana Del Rey - Born To Die Portico Quartet - Portico Quartet Errors - Have Some Faith In Magic
Django Django - Django Django The 2 Bears - Be Strong Darren Hayman - January Songs Barry Adamson - I Will Set You Free
First Aid Kit - The Lion's Roar Pulled Apart By Horses - Tough Love DJ Food - The Search Engine Chairlift - Something
Kathleen Edwards - Voyageur Leila - U&I Gonjasufi - MU.ZZ.LE Alog - Unemployment
The Big Pink - Future This Ani DiFranco - Which Side Are You On? Anthony Hopkins - Composer Tribes - Baby
Howler - America Give Up FOE - Bad Dream Hotline Guided By Voices - Let's Go Eat The Factory Wiley - Evolve Or Be Extinct
albums out this week
Mark Lanegan Band - Blues Funeral Lindstrøm - Six Cups Of Rebel Blondes - Blondes John Talabot - fIN
The Twilight Sad - No One Can Ever Know Maverick Sabre - Lonely Are The Brave Cloud Nothings - Attack On Memory Beth Jeans Houghton - Yours Truly, Cellophane Nose
recommended
Field Music
INTERVIEW
Field Music

David Brewis on the band's latest album Plumb and side projects.
Errors
Q&A
Errors

Steev Livingstone on unexpected tweets and Mogwai connections.
latest album reviews
    1. Earth - Angels Of Darkness, Demons Of Light II
    2. Boy & Bear - Moonfire
    3. Maribel - Reveries
    4. Air - Le Voyage Dans La Lune
    5. Tennis - Young & Old
    6. David's Lyre - Picture Of Our Youth
    7. Band Of Skulls - Sweet Sour
    8. Field Music - Plumb
    9. Xiu Xiu - Always
    10. Demi Lovato - Unbroken
    11. Hooray For Earth - True Loves
    12. Farrar, Johnson, Parker & Yames - New Multitudes
    13. Shearwater - Animal Joy
    14. Young Magic - Melt
    15. Paul McCartney - Kisses On The Bottom
    16. Of Montreal - Paralytic Stalks
    17. Sharon Van Etten - Tramp
    18. We Have Band - Ternion
    19. Pet Shop Boys - Format
    20. The Megaphonic Thrift - The Megaphonic Thrift
    21. Blondes - Blondes
    22. Lindstrøm - Six Cups Of Rebel
    23. Mark Lanegan Band - Blues Funeral
    24. John Talabot - fIN
    25. Matthew Bourne - Montauk Variations
    26. James Levy & The Blood Red Rose - Pray To Be Free
    27. Sweet Sweet Lies - The Hare, The Hound & The Tortoise
    28. Gotye - Making Mirrors
    29. Goldfrapp - The Singles
    30. Lana Del Rey - Born To Die
    31. Pepe Deluxe - Queen Of The Wave
    32. Porcelain Raft - Strange Weekend
    33. Young Guns - Bones
    34. Ital - Hive Mind
    35. Emeli Sandé - Our Version Of Events
    36. Portico Quartet - Portico Quartet
    37. Errors - Have Some Faith In Magic
    38. Prinzhorn Dance School - Clay Class
    39. Barry Adamson - I Will Set You Free

    40. more album reviews

  more album reviews...



musicOMH
about us
contact
copyright
home
elsewhere
Twitter
Facebook
Mixcloud
Soundcloud
Last.fm

© 1999-2012 OMH