5.15.2007

The Sea and Cake: Everybody

Bob Burnett: There is so much to like about The Sea and Cake. They have a beautiful floating quality to their sound, intricate melodies, thoughtful percussion, progressive arrangements, unique vocals. They even tastefully self-illustrate or shoot their own great photos for cover art.

I have little to no rational perspective on this band--you know how that happens sometimes? You find a band that you just absorb and the world is great. The Sea and Cake are that band to me. They fit me perfectly. Even their solo efforts work for me. In fact, I think vocalist/guitarist Sam Prekop's self-titled solo album is one of my ongoing favorite things to listen to.

And so after four years I get a new The Sea and Cake album to listen to and I am quite intrigued in a different way. Everybody is a change in course for the band. Granted, like all of their albums it's made up of ten songs but the process for making this one was different. In addition to playing drums, John McIntire (also a member of another no-rational-perspective-by me band Tortoise) usually engineers the recordings at his own Soma Electronic Music Studios. This time they recorded the album outside of Chicago at Key Club Studios in Benton Harbor, Michigan and used Bill Skibbe and Jessica Ruffins as engineers and Brian Paulson as Producer --freeing up McEntire to be a fulltime band member. They focused solely on the craft of making this album-- spending a lot of time rehearsing and working out material. Because of this effort, there seems to be few overdubs and reflects the positive attributes that happen when a band plays together in a focused manner.

Everybody doesn't have the glowing '70s Canterbury progressive rock moments that happened for me on their last two albums but that's completely alright. Everybody is pared back, cleaner, simpler but none-the-less compelling. “It’s a rock album,” said Prekop (on label Thrill Jockey's webpage) and continues by saying “the most straight ahead, even ‘rootsy’ record we’ve ever made.” I agree. Everybody is catchy.

I'm very excited that they are touring in support of this album because the songs will be great live. (In fact, I'm hoping to catch them at the Troubadour in Los Angeles this coming weekend)

PS: Saw The Sea and Cake at the Troubadour in LA on Sunday night and they were great--I hope you can catch them on this tour. They are sharp, driving, tight and alot more uptempo than on the studio albums. Its worth it just to see John McEntire playing drums--amazingly intense and focused.

3 comments:

  1. I started listening to Sea & Cake with The Biz. The group was pointed out to me 6-7 years ago by a musician/clerk in a very local cd store as an alternative band to listen to when I inquired about follow-ups to Tortoise's TNT. I've been, like you, a Sea & Cake kind of guy since then.

    This album is especially a thrill to listen to due to the long wait since One Bedroom and due to the anticipation of "Exact to Me" and "Lighting", two compositions that quite successfully, IMHO, incorporate the African guitar stylings of Diblo Dibala (also here.

    I wholeheartedly agree with your review's points with the exception of....
    cover and interior art. I love their use of photography with their albums. But, it roils my buttons that they never include the lyrics. Yeah, you can search them out on the Internet, but if you're actually buying the cd, it would be nice to have the songs' contents printed out. A minor quibble with their marketing style.

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  2. Thanks for the info on diblo and dibala--good stuff.

    The Sea and Cake will string you out on time between releases--for sure. I hope you've heard Prekop's solo albums too; really great and as I mentioned in the write-up regular listening for me. We'll have to agree to disagree on the cover art. I like the clean, simple look. I don't need the lyrics as part of the package. In fact I tend just to phonetically sigh along with Sam's singing anyway.

    I hope you get to see this tour. The friend I took along to the LA gig had never heard them and then was amazed at the contrast in their album sound vs. the live sound--the album sound being much more subdued.

    --Bob

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  3. Hey Bob,
    Yep, you're right about Mr. Prekop's solo effort. I was pleasantly surprised with the edginess, well, less mellow tone of some of his songs on "Who's Your New Professor". A very satisfying and different listen from Sea & Cake.

    A friend asked how I'd describe Sea & Cake's music. The best I could come up with was to talk about the long car trips we had quite a few years back. We listened to the early (late '70's and early '80's) Pat Metheny Group recordings (w/ Mays, Gottlieb, & Egan) while driving. We initially thought it light airy faux-Jazz, but after a few times through the continuous cassette player, the subtlety of the albums came through. The road flowed so easily. That's how Sea & Cake works for me as well.

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