Animal Collective
Merriweather Post Pavilion
Play Merriweather Post Pavilion
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MOG Editorial Review
Since the early aughts, Baltimore freak-poppers Animal Collective have consistently been on the brink of a mainstream breakthrough. Between co-founder Panda Bear's critically acclaimed solo effort, Person Pitch, in 2007 and the group's seventh group release, Strawberry Jam, in 2008, it's a wonder it didn't happen earlier. With Merriweather Post Pavillion, the group seized the opportunity to mash its out-there indie aesthetic into something oddly accessible. An album rife with synthesized, psychedelic madness, the result owes as much to Brian Wilson as it does to fringe electronic artists like Autechre. Riding the coattails of dance single "My Girls," the group has achieved the perfect mix of integrity and approachability, without blindly catering to the club.
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AMG Review of Merriweather Post Pavilion
John Bush
All Music GuideAnimal Collective have brought the celestial down to earth with each record, but they've never sounded simultaneously otherworldly and approachable quite like they do on Merriweather Post Pavilion. Their eighth studio LP, it finds them at their best -- straining farther away from conventional song structure and accompaniment, even while doubling back to reach lyrical themes and modes of singing at their most basic or child-like. Where before AC expertly inserted experimental snippets into relatively straight-ahead songs, Merriweather Post Pavilion sees them reach some kind of denouement where pop music ends and pure sonic experience begins -- the sound is the only structure. Dismantling the framework of a pop song almost entirely (but using recurring passages in a very poppy way), the group offer a series of overlapping circular elements, all of which occasionally come together for a chorus but then break apart just as quickly. The music itself, at least what's describable about it, consists of deep bass pulses and art-damaged guitars with overlapping vocal harmonies that rise in a holy chorus. This may sound much like previous Animal Collective highlights, but where those records seemed like a series of accidental masterpieces -- the type of work that sounds brilliant only because it's been culled from hundreds of hours of tape -- Merriweather Post Pavilion is a perfectly organized record, not a note out of place, not a second wasted. It has the excitement and energy of Sung Tongs, the ragged sonic glory of Feels, and Strawberry Jam's ability to make separate parts come together in a glorious whole. Like the best experimental rockers surging toward nirvana -- from the Beach Boys to Mercury Rev -- Animal Collective have not only created a private soundworld like none other, they've also made it an inviting place to visit.





















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