Tuesday, 2 May 2017

Slowdive - Slowdive


 People need labels. They also like reflexive pejoratives for confining art within a limited but easily referenced realm without having to really experience it. According to some Slowdive were once the Cocteau Twins, then they were shoegaze and now they are heritage act. Slowdive were never (obviously) the Cocteau Twins. Shoegazing (or a lack of onstage performance) was also a deliberate means to differentiate a band from the flailing baby boomers, hair metal nonsense and disingenuous pop histrionics of the early 90s. (The monstrous was in the demonstrative.) Not to mention, ahem, a way of functioning guitar-effect pedals, which happened to be near the odd desert boot or winkle picker (the original shoegazer’s shoe of choice). Thankfully, though, Slowdive transcend the collective sneers chosen to imprison them, and as this new album demonstrates, the band is also so much more than just a heritage act.

 Slowdive the album, titled after the band as a contemporizing statement, is not an inherited tradition of providing slithers of sustenance to the sentimentality of middle age nor is it an exercise of warming up leftovers to feed a propensity for nostalgia. Slowdive the album is alive. It is a record that burns with the infectious joy of creativity. The joy of knowing your strengths and being able to build on the past while also, importantly, being able to look to the future and still create something beyond a scope previously imagined, like a form of magic.

 Oh, and what a beautiful sound Slowdive still make. The soaring guitars in many of the songs have such an emotive force. No other band can make their effects-pedal-trickery sound like the opening of the heavens and at the same time allow for an exhilarating projection into oneself with the bittersweet thrill of being alive. It’s a glorious soundtrack to the battles to feel and be felt, within and without, before many of us depart to our imagined but majestic Valhalla.

 Slowdive is also an album that transcends beyond its instrumentation. Songs marry words to these beautiful sounds to open up interior rooms for contemplation, whether it is (as Rachel and Neil sing) a room for thinking about love, no longer making time; sugaring the pill or just wanting to feel it. There are only eight tracks on this album and the economy of the riches, condensed and concise, only leaves you wanting more. Which is at is should be for a band who magically exist beyond their heritage and whatever lifeless word prisons made for them. Slowdive (the album) proves it.

Slowdive (the album) is available on May 5th from Dead Oceans.





Christian Martius (2017)