Plumbiferous Media

Feral Harmonic - Old Canes

Oct 25th 2009
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Feral Harmonic - OId CanesOId Canes
Feral Harmonic
Score: 40








Old Canes is the indie-folk side project of Christo­pher Crisci, bet­ter known as front­man of The Apple­seed Cast. The band began as Crisci’s solo project and even­tu­ally devel­oped into a larger group. Since its for­ma­tion in 2002, Old Canes has released two albums, its 2004 debut album Early Morn­ing Hymns, and its recent release, Feral Har­monic. Though Feral Har­monic shows poten­tial in sev­eral areas, issues with mix­ing, instru­men­tals, and over­all sound make it much less suc­cess­ful than it could have been.

The instru­men­tals are quite clearly the worst part of Feral Har­monic. Even so, there are some suc­cesses. “Trust” uses inter­est­ing chord struc­tures to cre­ate a slightly darker over­all sound than on most of the album, which serves to sub­due ele­ments that can often become over­pow­er­ing on other tracks. And unlike on the pre­ced­ing track, “The Last Col­lapse,” the track inte­grates bells quite suc­cess­fully by sud­denly shift­ing to a bridge sec­tion and allow­ing them to take over the main har­monic line from the gui­tar, then later inte­grat­ing them back into the rest of the track. “Next Flood,” the fol­low­ing track also fol­lows in the same vein, although it does not end up work­ing quite as well as on “Trust.”

How­ever, for the major­ity of the album, the instru­men­tals are a mess. Most notice­able on entirely instru­men­tal sec­tions, Old Canes often tends towards overly dense instru­men­ta­tion, and while every line seems rel­a­tively well con­nected to every other line, the music as a whole is never fully coher­ent. The entire album is infected with a heavy amount of shrill­ness which serves no use­ful or mean­ing­ful pur­pose, and nat­u­rally, the per­cus­sive instru­ments are most affected. This prob­lem is then only exac­er­bated by the frankly mis­er­able mix­ing job, most of which seems to have been focused on mak­ing the per­cus­sion parts as loud as pos­si­ble with­out sound­ing com­pletely ludicrous.

Fol­low­ing the largely instru­men­tal intro “Intro,” Christo­pher Crisci’s voice enters Feral Har­monic. It’s imme­di­ately appar­ent that Crisci’s voice is bring­ing the same emo­tional power to this project as it does with The Apple­seed Cast, and the music ben­e­fits greatly for it. How­ever, while Crisci’s ener­getic vocals have a def­i­nite pres­ence, they are too often buried beneath an extremely noisy (and not ter­ri­bly musi­cal) instru­men­tal cov­er­ing. Equally respon­si­ble for the mask­ing effect is the heavy-handed appli­ca­tion of a vocal effect which makes Crisci’s vocals sound quite metal­lic. The echo­ing back­ground vocal­ists seen on “Lit­tle Bird Courage” have the same regret­table effect of draw­ing atten­tion away from Crisci’s voice, though for­tu­nately this doesn’t appear again in quite the same form. All together, while the poten­tial of Crisci’s voice is clear, it is crushed under the com­bined effect of each of these issues in a frankly dis­ap­point­ing manner.

The often dark and melan­choly lyrics of Feral Har­monic are well-written and well-suited to Crisci’s vocals - but when com­bined with the sharp sound lent to the album by the mas­ter­ing job, the mood suf­fers. Nev­er­the­less, Old Canes has writ­ten inter­est­ing lyrics, includ­ing the more than vaguely para­noid “Lit­tle one be care­ful / There are peo­ple out there who steal your soul / You can’t trust every­one / The more you sus­pect / The more you know” from “Trust.” The lyrics of Feral Har­monic are quite pos­si­bly the best part of the album, and as such it’s a pity that they’re entombed under­neath many much less suc­cess­ful sections.

Feral Har­monic has all the com­po­nents of a strong album, includ­ing inter­est­ing lines and melodies, vari­ety, poten­tially pow­er­ful vocals and lyrics, and clearly com­pe­tent musi­cians. Unfor­tu­nately, these ele­ments are often scat­tered through the album, rather than con­sis­tently present in every track. It is then quite easy to for­get the promis­ing sec­tions when they are buried in the sea of overly dense, incred­i­bly fast paced, often bor­der­ing on rau­cous instru­men­tals, drum parts that are con­sis­tently far too loud, unde­sir­able vocal afflic­tions, and tracks that are as well mixed as a lumpy cus­tard. All in all, Feral Har­monic sim­ply isn’t a very good album.


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2 Responses

  1. alaugh says:

    This album is awe­some. I have no idea what uni­verse this reviewer is on. If any­body can start a music blog and make them­selves a critic, then they should have a respon­si­bil­ity to do their home­work. After­all, all of us are truly crit­ics. Therefore…Here’s my brief two cents on an album that I could write para­graphs on… The instru­men­ta­tion and sound are a cho­sen style of Crisci’s, and are very well done here. This stands alone as a unique, exper­i­men­tal, indie-folk album. And the reviewer is clearly narrow-minded and ill-informed on this genre. I encour­age all to check it out and see for yourselves.

  2. jared says:

    i agree whole­heart­edly with “alaugh”. crisci is a genius, in so many ways. the work he does with old canes tosses my mind into such an imag­i­na­tive state. he has cap­tured and sculpted the con­cept of melody with what i can only describe as a child­like sense of beauty and inno­cence. the reviewer, if one can even call him that, is seri­ously flawed in his judge­ment. and i really do won­der if he should even be crit­i­ciz­ing any­thing that crisci does, since he obvi­ously doesn’t know a damn thing about him… like maybe the fact that he also runs his own record­ing busi­ness out of Day­break Record­ing in kansas. so what­ever sound he puts out is most def­i­nitely how he intended it to be. “mix­ing issues” haha. dumb fuck. i would even feel com­fort­able putting this album up there with low level owl v. 1 & 2, as far as crisci’s work goes.

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