MELT-PROOF AND SCRATCH-RESISTANT

The Do

A Mouthful

  • AMG Review of A Mouthful

    Amg
    K. Ross Hoffman
    All Music Guide

    The Dř -- the Parisian duo of Dan Levy and Olivia B. Merilahtin, whose moniker (pronounced like "dough") derives from both member's initials, but also refers to the first (and last) note of the solfege scale, as well as the Norwegian and Danish words for "die" -- stake out their unconventional indie folk-hip-pop territory with A Mouthful. It's all over the map, both musically and emotionally, and can be a lot to take in ("A Handful" might have been more appropriate), but they manage to strike a quirky yet affecting through-line that mediates between their frisky playfulness, fiery brashness, and tenderly sentimental sincerity, and helps to integrate the album's stylistic hodge-podge so that its eclecticism feels improbably natural rather than forced or gimmicky (or simply schizophrenic.) To be sure, the album's success rests largely on the duo's high-caliber musicianship -- in particular, multi-instrumentalist Levy's dextrous, sophisticated arrangements (which reflect, among other things, both his jazz influences and the pair's past collaborations on a handful of film soundtracks), and Merilahtin's distinctive, versatile singing voice -- which allows them to tackle an idiosyncratic assortment of genres with uncanny ease and coherence.

    For the bulk of its running time -- roughly two-thirds of the tracks, give or take -- A Mouthful doesn't stray terribly far from relatively familiar, primarily guitar-centric folk/pop/rock fare, with a particular focus on breezy balladry (including the autumnal "Song for Lovers" and the sublime, elegantly bluesy "At Last") and a few tougher-edged roots-pop nuggets ("On My Shoulders," "The Bridge Is Broken.") Often, especially on the more aggressive cuts toward the album's end, this material recalls the artier side of '90s alternative and indie rock -- a comparison brought home by Merilahtin's passing vocal resemblance to prettily gritty singers like PJ Harvey, Liz Phair, and Nina Persson (specifically her work with A Camp). Even on these comparatively pedestrian offerings, the Dř offer far more compositional and instrumental nuance than your typical songwriterly outfit. Elsewhere, they hop through genres with gleeful abandon, calling to mind the infectious precocity of early Nellie McKay, the capriciousness of Beck, and perhaps even Björk's limitless ingenuity. Not that anything here feels remotely like a derivative genre exercise. "Stay (Just a Little Bit More)" is a cute bit of retro-pop whimsy polka-dotted with ukulele, whistling, strings, and carnivalesque organ; "Queen Dot Kong" is a shockingly credible but utterly demented stab at hip-hop with a swaggering horn section, all manner of cartoonish musical left turns, and its own expansively grooving instrumental-fusion coda. And the album's hidden gem is "Unissassi Laulelet," an all-too-brief curiosity that blends bewitchingly harmonized a cappella vocals (sung in Finnish) with polyrhythmic, quasi-ethnic "tribal" percussion to truly enchanting effect. Then there's the downright off-the-wall opener, "Playground Hustle," a sort of nursery rhyme-war chant by an army of disgruntled, gender-norm-disrupting youngsters, set to a spasmodically funky found-sound beat, which sounds like the Go! Team skirmishing with Le Tigre in a schoolyard scrap-heap with Matmos (circa The Civil War) providing the arsenal. Or something. Anyway, it doesn't really sound like anything else out there, or for that matter like anything else on this album -- which makes it a pretty appropriate calling card. The Dř's debut may be a mouthful, but it's deliciously sweet, tangy, and zestful, and definitely well worth biting into.

Ear worm coming through...
10 months ago
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The Ear Worm is in the video. The Red Dot is pretty nice as well.The Do (pronounced "Doe" or "Dough" or "Doh") are a French and Finnish duo ... that's all I know.A few weeks ago someone here posted this video but unfortunately didn't tag it because I can't find any posts in the Mog lounge on them.This song has bored a hole in my head like a labotomy but, like a much needed labotomy. You know, l...

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Get You Some
8 months ago

I've come to accept the fact that I just can't keep up anymore. I was a faux-hipster from the beginning (how ironic?), but finding sweet little "unknown" gems like this has always been one of the best parts about digging beneath the surface (or at least knowing the ones who do, thx B).Pronounced "dough", The Do are a finnish/french due who genre-hop like rabbits and end up with interesting res...

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The Do
about 1 year ago

I've been really enjoying an album called A Mouthful by an almost ungoogle-able duo called The Do. (They're named after the first note on the scale, a la "Do, a deer, a female deer..." etc.)The singer, a woman named Olivia, has a wonderful, blurry, child-like voice...little bit of blues tucked into essentially pop rock cadences. She's backed by a guy named Dan, who puts enough beat and instru...

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My weekly spotlight: The Do
10 months ago
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I heard this about a month ago and couldn't get it out of my head. This couple is Dan Levy. a french musician and Olivia Merilahtin, a finnish singer.They combine differant styles or music genres to their songs and the freshness of their style has been irresistable to me. I've been listening to this record for a couple weeks now and am loving it .

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