LP (CD)
CD FORMAT. Discovery is the recording project of Rostam Batmanglij and Wes Miles, friends who began recording together in the summer of 2005. One year later they had committed themselves to their respective bands, Vampire Weekend and Ra Ra Riot, but nonetheless continued to record together when they both found themselves in the same city. The project is many things: it's partly an attempt to realize Wes's concept of a band where everyone plays synthesizers, and of Rostam's concept for an album where handclaps keep the backbeat instead of snares drums. It's an embrace and also a commentary on the pop music of the past decade, of booming 808 bass and jittery sixteenth note high-hats. Elements of European electronic dance music skittering in double-time over steady R&B. If soul music is secularized, sexualized gospel, Discovery is an attempt to see if soul music can survive being plasticized, roboticized, quantized, chopped, and finally, screwed. The album features Rostam and Wes each singing half the songs and guest vocals from Ezra Koenig (Vampire Weekend) and Angel Deradoorian (Dirty Projectors).![]()
| Aaron Geer
- Kalamazoo, MI, US |
| Discovery is the recording project of Wes Miles (lead singer of Syracuse, New York's Ra Ra Riot) and Rostam Batmanglij (the guy from Vampire Weekend that wears HUGE scarves and looks like that mor(m)on from American Idol). Instead of combining the orchestrated chamber pop and exuberant afro-indie that we recognize from the two, they have given us LP, an album so ambitious and eager that it's almost bewildering.
With tracks layered with synth as thick as Al Roker's excess fat (''I Wanna Be Your Boyfriend'' featuring the warble-cat singing of Dirty Projectors' Angel Deradoorian), snare that flashes like lightning over a pastiche of 00's R&B drums (''Can You Discover''), and sensitive, fx-vocals (''It's Not My Fault (It's My Fault)'') easily show that these two pop-lovers are indulgent in the European electro-dance that has been spinning in the clubs for the last thirty years.
LP is definitely a summer record that probably won't last a long time once the leaves start to turn their color, but for that time being, pump it, loud, and have a good time.
LP is out now on XL Recordings.
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