| Why is Ben Allen Eating Eskimo Snow with Yoni Wolf? |
| By Ben Allen | |
| Monday, 12 October 2009 | |
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Starting with 2005's Elephant Eyelash, Why? has been gradually transitioning from post-rap into a full fledged indie-art-rock folk group. First single "The Blackest Purse," is a swelling, passionate piano ballad that wouldn't sound too out of place on a Ben Folds record. The song peaks with the chorus, "Should our hero's hands be holding this blackest purse? Mom, am I failing or worse?"
"Into the Shadows of My Embrace" is both the standout track and a milestone in Why?'s musical evolution. "I conquered my own childhood silence and now the world is my lit confessional marquee," Wolf sings over a 60's teen-bop groove. From there, it picks up momentum, gently chugging along until it reaches an apex. "I wish I could feel close to somebody, but I don’t feel nothing. Now they say I need to quit doing all this random fffff. . ." stopping himself short before dropping the eff bomb. The song closes with over a minute of the band beating a riff into submission while letting their guitars get noisy and weird. Some of the appeal to longtime fans has always been trying to decipher Wolf’s cryptic lyrical content, and here there's still some content that appears to no more than free association weirdness. Take "sex can make you younger and older at the same time," or "it’d take a busload of high school soccer girls to wash these hospitals off me."
While not necessarily a definitive career statement, Eskimo Snow serves as a testament to a band still finding itself, exploring the possibilities of what will be. Ultimately, it seems like an acknowledgement of the gap between the supreme brilliance of Alopecia and wherever Why? is heading next.
The last track finds Wolf repeating the line, ". . .and I'm still here." Be glad he is. - (7/10) ----------------
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