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Formal Growth in the Desert
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Formal Growth in the Desert
Current price: $15.99
Barnes and Noble
Formal Growth in the Desert
Current price: $15.99
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Ever since they released
in 2012,
have been a band more than a little obsessed with ranting about a world gone wrong, as seen from their window in one of Detroit's less scenic neighborhoods. Their fifth album, 2020's
, came as America's growing political and racial divide was dominating the news cycle while the COVID-19 pandemic became more severe than anyone expected, and it felt like the uncomfortable musings of a paranoid discovering the world really was out to get them. It was brilliant while leaving an open question of where the band could go next, and 2023's
finds them no more optimistic than usual but embracing the reality that sometimes there's nowhere to go but forward. As
saw them expanding their tonal palette with contributions from free jazz artists
and
,
features pedal steel player
on nine of its twelve tracks, adding a simple but effective orchestral feel that supplements the more traditional force of
's big, echoey six-string. (
, who co-produced the album with engineer
, said the steel was influenced by his passion for vintage spaghetti western scores). The melodies are as straightforward and muscular as ever, with more graceful structures, yet executed with the precision and dynamic that make their music so satisfying, especially the powerfully imaginative drumming of
and the rich, malleable basslines of
. As great as the band is, it's the vocals and lyrics of
that set
apart from their peers, and here his dramatic, compelling spiels deal with the deeply personal (the death of his mother in "Graft vs. Host" and the constant break-ins that led him to leave his longtime home in "We Know the Rats"), and the unfortunately universal (poisonous nostalgia in "Fun in Hi Skool," the cluelessness of the economic elite in "Tip the Creator," the abuse of the working class in "Fulfillment Center"), and as always, he's impassioned and literate, speak-singing with a barely simmering fury that makes room for compassion for those done wrong.
would almost certainly have sounded like nay-sayers even in America's salad days, but in 2023
plays like another State of the Union address from this band of intelligent malcontents, and what they have to say is strikingly effective as editorial commentary and as music. ~ Mark Deming