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Tartar Lamb - Sixty Metonymies CD (album) cover

SIXTY METONYMIES

Tartar Lamb

 

RIO/Avant-Prog

3.18 | 24 ratings

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TCat
Special Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator / Retired Admin
3 stars Toby Driver and Mia Matsumiya have both been (and still are) busy with the band Kayo Dot. But somehow, they found some time to create another project called 'Tartar Lamb', the one that slipped by several of their fans (me included). Where Kayo Dot features many other musicians, Tartar Lamb is more concentrated on the musical interaction of Toby and Mia, and originally for the specific recording of Driver's '60 Metonymies', a guitar/violin duet. That album was released in 2007 with the addition of a few other musicians; Tim Byrnes on trumpet and Andrew Greewald on drums. This somewhat sparser composition is divided up into 4 sections and has a total run time of 41 minutes.

The stripped back sound of this minimalist album still gives the listener the uneasy sounds of dissonance, but in a manner that is not so chaotic as some of the Kayo Dot music. Throughout the album, the spaces inbetween what might seem to some as random exploratory notes are just as important as the actual notes, and at first, it seems that there is a lot of space there to listen to. But as Mia joins in, the notes of the guitar and later the occasional warbling of the trumpet are all connected together by her long sustained bowing of notes on the violin. The feeling is one of improvisation, but the structure on the other hand feels more like the notes and sounds are intentionally placed.

'Incensing the Malediction is a Lamb' (12:30) rolls by slowly and sometimes hesitantly, plucked guitar and a more phrased violin, no rhythm or beat to speak of, as if its all in free meter. Further into the track, the guitar is slowly strummed and the violin emits squeaky noises as the trumpet continues to influence things with occasional squawking noises, playing within a range instead of actually hitting single notes. 'A Lamb in Hand's Worth Two in the Ewe' (3:12) consists of sustained guitar and plucked/bowed violin strings and occasional cymbals whispering. The two main instruments play together and stop together for the most part. Percussive sounds and drum rolls come in later with a meandering trumpet which gets a little more angry, then later they all become a bit more playful, but the track is short and ends soon.

'Trumpet Twine the Lamb Unkyne' (9:35) begins with all of the instruments doing what seems to be unrelated things together. As such, it is much less minimal, more chaotic, but not really what you would call heavy or noisy. Soon, though, the music returns to the more minimal sound. As it continues, there is a level of tension that builds as sound builds and fades, but without any resolve. Again, space is as important as the sound, and sometimes even suggests the breaking up of the tracks into smaller segments even though there is no indication that it is divided up that way. 'The Lamb, the Ma'am, and the Holy Shim-Sham' (16:38) continues in this way, echoing guitar notes that play and the slowly warble out of existence, with space in between note groups so one can hear them echoing out of existence. Mia provides short bowed notes that lay on top of the plucked and lightly strummed guitar notes, softly plucking strings in the spaces between groups. Again tension reigns supreme, and no resolution of that tension is to be seen, even with the shocking addition of creepy enhanced spoken word vocals towards the end of the track.

There is an obvious difference between this style and Toby's usual style that is realized in Kayo Dot albums. Even though there can be a lot of variation in form and style among Kayo Dot's discography, it is obvious why this composition was performed under a different moniker, as it is so much more minimal than any Kayo Dot album, and that is the sound that pretty much rules this album, avant-garde minimalism. It is difficult to concentrate on it all as a whole because it almost has too much space and free sounding instrumentation in it. There is no melody, per se, and don't expect much in the way of typical structure. Toby would return to this moniker once again in 2011 for another composition of 4 movements named 'Polyimage of Know Exits', where he would play with more musicians and Mia's involvement would be reduced to only one track. Is it possible that, even with KD's experimentalism and unique avant-garde styles, that Tartar Lamb is Toby's less accessible side? Those familiar with all of KD's albums will know that they are anything but accessible, but in reality, Tartar Lamb takes that even further and in the case of this album, much harder to listen to unless in the mood for minimal music. To me, it all seems a bit starchy and unemotional, ending up sounding more random wandering with the music trying to find a sound, but not succeeding other than making anything that seems organized, yet it is organized. This is a tough one, especially since I love experimental music, but there has to be a level of emotion or purpose behind it, and I can't seem to find it here. Still, it can be nice to listen to if one is occasionally in the right mood, but at the moment I am hard pressed to know when that would be. If there is a rationale behind it all, it is too buried and secreted away in the music to figure it out.

TCat | 3/5 |

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