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The Deepest Lake [LP]
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The Deepest Lake [LP]
Current price: $14.99
Barnes and Noble
The Deepest Lake [LP]
Current price: $14.99
Loading Inventory...
Size: CD
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While
Dengue Fever
could almost have qualified as a novelty act when they first started out (Los Angeles hipsters playing decades-old Cambodian pop tunes? Talk about high concept!), they've matured into a richly satisfying band, blending several different cultures and styles into an indie rock melting pot, and 2015's
The Deepest Lake
, their sixth studio album, is another striking and pleasurable example of East meeting West. Though the exotica accents and semi-psychedelic drift of their earlier work are still clearly visible on
(most notably on the lovely "Golden Flute"), African percussive accents and hip-hop elements play a larger role in this music, while "Rom Say Sok" is steeped in American R&B, "Cardboard Castles" lays distorted guitars and graceful guitars over quietly churning percussion, and "Still Waters Run Deep" sounds like the main theme of a spy movie set in Phnom Penh with its punchy horns and dramatic twists and turns. The members of
wrote, produced, and recorded all ten tunes on
, bringing a witty and intelligent melodic sense to the songs and a clean, atmospheric tone to the audio, and while the songs are primarily sung in a Cambodian dialect by lead vocalist
Chhom Nimol
, the occasional bursts of English add considerably to the multi-cultural flavor of the music, allowing both sides to play like strangers in a strange land. And
simply play brilliantly as a band, with
Zac Holtzman
's guitars and
Ethan Holtzman
's keyboards lending the songs a broad spectrum of tonal colors and attitudes,
David Ralicke
's horns commenting on the surroundings with wisdom and smarts, and bassist
Senon Williams
and drummer
Paul Dreux Smith
nudging the music forward with just the right touch.
have grown far beyond a mere world music pastiche; on
, they deliver music that's thoughtful, imaginative, and sensuous in all the best ways, and this album is a joy for listeners with a taste for sonic adventure. ~ Mark Deming
Dengue Fever
could almost have qualified as a novelty act when they first started out (Los Angeles hipsters playing decades-old Cambodian pop tunes? Talk about high concept!), they've matured into a richly satisfying band, blending several different cultures and styles into an indie rock melting pot, and 2015's
The Deepest Lake
, their sixth studio album, is another striking and pleasurable example of East meeting West. Though the exotica accents and semi-psychedelic drift of their earlier work are still clearly visible on
(most notably on the lovely "Golden Flute"), African percussive accents and hip-hop elements play a larger role in this music, while "Rom Say Sok" is steeped in American R&B, "Cardboard Castles" lays distorted guitars and graceful guitars over quietly churning percussion, and "Still Waters Run Deep" sounds like the main theme of a spy movie set in Phnom Penh with its punchy horns and dramatic twists and turns. The members of
wrote, produced, and recorded all ten tunes on
, bringing a witty and intelligent melodic sense to the songs and a clean, atmospheric tone to the audio, and while the songs are primarily sung in a Cambodian dialect by lead vocalist
Chhom Nimol
, the occasional bursts of English add considerably to the multi-cultural flavor of the music, allowing both sides to play like strangers in a strange land. And
simply play brilliantly as a band, with
Zac Holtzman
's guitars and
Ethan Holtzman
's keyboards lending the songs a broad spectrum of tonal colors and attitudes,
David Ralicke
's horns commenting on the surroundings with wisdom and smarts, and bassist
Senon Williams
and drummer
Paul Dreux Smith
nudging the music forward with just the right touch.
have grown far beyond a mere world music pastiche; on
, they deliver music that's thoughtful, imaginative, and sensuous in all the best ways, and this album is a joy for listeners with a taste for sonic adventure. ~ Mark Deming