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How many times has a band's 15th album been one of their best?
The answer is four. And one of them is Join Us, the new album by
They Might Be Giants. Join Us finds John Flansburgh and John Linnell
on a creative roll, making music that positively swarms with energy,
invention, and an impeccable grasp of the miraculous synergy of
words and music.
To understand where this artistry comes from, it helps to remember
They Might Be Giants' beginnings: as a key part of the early '80s
explosion of visual art, music, and performance art that put New
York's East Village on the cultural map. But while most cutting-edge
rock at the time was bruising and nihilistic, the two Johns were
making Dadaist, truly post-modern pop, forming a branch of
underground music whose membership consisted entirely of themselves.
"We're fully aware of the musical worlds both to the left of us and
to the right of us — we've heard avant garde music, we've heard
popular music," says Flansburgh. "That's given us the notion that we
can be as original as we can be and still make worthwhile songs."
In 1990, They Might Be Giants created some of their greatest work
just as alternative rock was cresting — and went platinum with the
classic Flood. In the ensuing 20 years, they've become a beloved and
fully diversified institution, conquering all media throughout the
known universe, contributing to film and TV soundtracks, making hit
DVDs, winning two Grammy awards, becoming Musical Ambassadors for
International Space Year, appearing as cartoon characters, writing
music for a robot ballet, topping the iTunes podcast charts, and
being the subject of the acclaimed documentary Gigantic: A Tale of
Two Johns. And now the very aptly titled Join Us.
Join Us is a great leap forward for They Might Be Giants — in part
because in several ways, it's a "get back" record. On their previous
album, 2007's The Else, the two Johns worked with
producers the Dust Brothers (Beck, Beastie Boys); this time, they
produced themselves, along with (very) long-time co-conspirator Pat
Dillett, and took a new approach that was actually an old approach.
If The Else was a self-consciously rock record, this one strives to
be unself-conscious. "We got back to our beginners' mind about how
ugly it could be, how strange it could be," says Flansburgh. "We're
flying our freak flag super high on this one."
You can't step in the same river twice, though, and Join Us finds
the two Johns 30 years wiser and more sophisticated than they were
on their debut. The studio wizardry, while understated, is
state-of-the-art and the performances draw on the ineffable
chemistry of an ace live band — drummer Marty Beller, guitarist Dan
Miller, and bassist Danny Weinkauf — that has remained virtually
unchanged for a decade.
The simplicity of the arrangements also recalls their very earliest
work. "Half the time, there are only three instruments playing at
any given moment," Flansburgh points out. "And often we're both
singing. We wanted to have music that we could sing together. That's
all very much a return to our first couple of records."
And yet, Linnell adds, "There was a lot of discovery going on. It's
experimental music. You're experimenting and then after a series of
blind alleys you suddenly find something really interesting and
everyone goes wow." Take, for instance, the intro to "The Lady and
the Tiger." "We were plugging things into different effects — and
suddenly this whistling came out," Linnell says. "Nobody was
expecting that, but immediately it seemed like a really important
element in the recording. It's like it's trying to say something but
you can't quite say what it is. A lot of the best things about music
are like that." And more specifically, a lot of the best things
about They Might Be Giants are like that.
If the band's lyrics seem enigmatic at first (and, usually, third or
fourth) glance, it's because they're reaching for things that can
only be expressed with a song. So don't look for much in the way of
autobiography. "We don't write songs about our own largely dull
lives," Linnell says. "We mostly rely on the time-tested gimmick of
making shit up." Still, it's tempting to try to knit together the
strands of this album: the double meaning of the title, the theme of
defiance that runs through the songs, the cryptic self-references…
it's as if there's a concept in there somewhere, waiting for some
clever person to ferret out what it is.
The songs of Join Us are largely populated by sleazebags, oddballs,
jerks, and people who are barely hanging on to their sanity (or
not). Check out the uncomfortably unctuous guy in "You Probably Get
That a Lot." (Don't know what a cephalophore is? Well, look it up!
It's interesting! ) Then there's the possibly schizophrenic narrator
of "Cloisonné," and the character of "In Fact" who admits with some
understatement, "I'm a mess." It's cathartic to sing along to these
songs — because it was even more cathartic to write them. "Mucking
around in the mind of an unreliable narrator," says Flansburgh, "is
about halfway between a pleasant short vacation and self-induced
mental illness, and this album is about as chock-full of that as
anything we've ever done."
The music is so catchy and beguiling that it's easy to miss the
subtle and often complex darkness that lurks in many of these songs,
something that's been true since the band's 1986 self-titled debut.
So listen closely to the opener, "Can't Keep Johnny Down," or the
existential despair of "The Lady and the Tiger," the actually kind
of disturbing "Cloisonné," or the way the heraldic folk rock of "Old
Pine Box" is actually about a broken-down screw-up. And then there's
the heartbreaking closer "You Don't Like Me." "What might not be
obvious from a distance in our music is how adult the themes are,"
says Flansburgh. "Adult lives are filled with disappointment and how
to reconcile yourself to the life you ended up with."
It's not all ominous though — there are songs that harbor truth and
keen insight within a meticulously crafted pop song, like the
sublime party jam "Celebration," the perfect pop of "Let Your Hair
Hang Down," and the exuberant Who homage "Judy Is Your Vietnam."
"Canajoharie" might be one of the band's greatest songs ever: Not
only will it get you to heartily sing the name of an obscure town in
upstate New York, but if you dig deeper, it's a powerful insight
into the nature of nostalgia.
They Might Be Giants both recall and reinvent pop songwriting;
they're in a league with modern masters like Elvis Costello, Sparks
and XTC, echoes of whom you can hear in Join Us. As Flansburgh
notes, "We're rock people — we grew up in this hypnotizing moment
when there was nothing more persuasive than popular song. It was so
good, it stole the minds of an entire generation.
Join Us? By all means.
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Artist's Web Site
See a YouTube clip from They Might Be Giants
Presented in conjunction with NCBPAC & Landshark Entertainment
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