Sic Alps

U.S. EZ

  • AMG Review of U.S. EZ

    Amg
    Stewart Mason
    All Music Guide

    Noisily experimental San Francisco duo Sic Alps graduate to the comparatively mainstream Siltbreeze label for their fifth album, and the album title is not as ironic as those who have heard its predecessors might think: it's not exactly easy listening, but this is by some distance the most immediately accessible album Sic Alps have so far released. There are still a few blurts of aimless, skronky noise ("N# #JJ" is a duet for random drumkit and amplifier abuse, and "Bric Jaz (Reprise)" is merely 13 seconds' worth of backwards tape), but otherwise, almost all of these 14 songs have actual musical structure. "Mater" and "Inventing a Common Rule" even have harmony vocals, and they're in tune yet! The familiar cracker-box production and hissy lo-fi sound are still in place, but underneath that, U.S. EZ has moments of actual pop suss, such as the tense, whispered closer "Quai des Orfevres," the hazy folk-rock of "Sing Song Waitress," and the good-natured choogle of "Jelly Roll Gum Drop" (not the Zappa tune). Another album or so on this level and Sic Alps will be primed for a breakthrough à la Guided by Voices circa Propeller.

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