Sleigh Bells - Jessica Rabbit
Drowned In Sound 90
Pink sunset flares over the horizon. The interstate and I are one today. Sometimes nightmares cross my mind – slipping under 16 wheels, sideswiping a sedan, flying over the curve of the exit to I-85. But not today, not today. Lean into the turn, sweep two lanes at 80 miles per hour, glide past three vans, swerve right when some asshole cuts in front. How many times a day do I laugh at death, I wonder. This evening, I count thrice.
Fitting, really, to compare an average day on the interstate with a drive through Sleigh Bells. Until now, Derek Miller and Alexis Krauss have always created the illusion of athleticism with the latter’s cheerleader enthusiasm and the former’s shameless thunder riffs: Treats was like a pep rally on steroids, Reign of Terror an Olympic stadium, Bitter Rivals a dojo for the Powderpuff Girls. Jessica Rabbit remains as ripped as ever, but our intrepid duo have transcended the sports field – indeed, now Sleigh Bells occupy five fields simultaneously, at the risk of their own lives. Anything’s possible with quantum physics, babe – and only quantum physics can explain how ham-fisted guitar licks, deconstructed fanfares, hip hop beats, massive pop hooks, and the most grandiose fuck-you attitude these ears have ever heard could merge into such radiant pyrotechnics.
Lawdy, lawdy, lawdy. Where to begin but with a racing heart on the fritz? Everything about Jessica Rabbit is visceral – full-force drum slams, the slick claps, Miller’s steely slabs of guitar, lyrics replete with bombs, knives, and natural disasters. And Krauss is out for blood, as she belts fighting words like fisticuffs - you’d best believe her when she warns ”If you so much as look at me wrong / I’m coming down on your head and your home” on the colossal metal jam “Throw Me Down the Stairs”. But the duo flaunts real finesse whenever they pivot between hammer blows and ballet strides – in the same song, the guitars drop, and Krauss twirls on mist in a dreamscape for 30 seconds when she croons, “do you know what I mean?”
Blackout. We must begin again. But dear god, those belters! Punches fly from everywhere! Opener 'It’s Only Us Now' butters you up with the Joe Walsh licks, then pummels you down with the studded trap beat, behemoth riffs, and Krauss in full galactic flight. 'Crucible' slays so much – think Britney Spears backed by Laibach - that the weird pipe-traversing breakdown in the middle doesn’t kill the buzz. And 'I Can Only Stare'? Is this heaven, or just the missing link between Sky Ferreira and The Cure? The genius part is, by the third time through, you wanna fly with them – hail the ginormous theatre of 'Lightning Turns Sawdust Gold', or 'I Just Can’t Stand You Anymore', a hybrid beast of Joan Jett heat and Pink cool, and the perfect battle cry for playing chicken on the interstate.
Burnout. Start again, gently this time. Yet, even when Sleigh Bells pull back and yield to tense synths, gilded pianos, and other studio gizmos, the listener still feels pinned to the floor by a physical force. Witness the incredible 'Loyal For', a study in maxed-out minimalism that borrows equal parts from Arthur Russell and Beyoncé; or behold “I Know Not To Count On You”, the acoustic-driven hangover of a ballad that genuinely sounds wrecked. There’s even a quasi-conventional, Lorde-ish pop song in 'Baptism By Fire' – and while the tip-toe piano thing and millennial whoops might veer too close to the mainstream for comfort, several puzzling lines keep the ruse going (I’m fond of “I see the judges drown / all drunk on context”).
But just when the listener might feel safe on the home stretch, in comes 'As If' for the final showdown. There will be a traffic jam before the apocalypse anyway, won’t there? Hence this lightning round of Lightning Bolt terror, that kills the switch with strobe lights and pop-up choirs and one last close-up at the queen of the hill. Blackout again. How many times a day do you laugh at death? Who knows – but with Jessica Rabbit, Sleigh Bells have mastered mortality. If you can’t handle that, then get off the road, chump.
Mon Nov 14 12:39:31 GMT 2016The Guardian 80
(Torn Clean)
When Sleigh Bells first roared into view in 2010, it felt as if they were less a band and more a conundrum: namely, can a group simultaneously be cranium-crushingly loud and chart-botheringly sweet? Four albums later, and with that question conclusively answered, the noisepop duo have decided to branch out a little. Jessica Rabbit is still clearly a Sleigh Bells album – the recognisable thud of Derek Miller’s distorted guitar lines on bruising opening track It’s Just Us Now stands as punishing confirmation of that – but there’s a wider sonic palette on show than on previous efforts: snatches of synth and glitchy breakbeats jostle for attention alongside Alex Krauss’s clean, poppy vocals. Indeed, where once Krauss’s voice felt overwhelmed by the cacophony behind it, here it’s given star billing, gliding over the rap-rock riff of I Can’t Stand You Anymore and providing a punchy counterpoint to I Can Only Stare’s frosty R&B. An encouraging move into new territory.
Continue reading... Thu Nov 10 21:00:00 GMT 2016Tiny Mix Tapes 60
Sleigh Bells
Jessica Rabbit
[Torn Clean; 2016]
Rating: 3/5
As Animal Collective were taking critical pop to new heights with a home-state love letter and Crystal Castles were engendering a new internet-infused microcosm, I was an oddball loser, writing about music on a Wordpress since lost, thankfully, to the memory hole. It was a hopelessly adolescent time.
Yet it was one made lighter by the presence of a release that revealed itself out of the most left of fields. This radical artifact necessarily became a flashpoint for a renewed discourse on inter-generic method and melodic sensibility: it was a pop album that wasn’t, a subverted thrash anthem for self-styled Pussys Like Me [sic]. Treats rocked my world — No Homo, Bro.
Although it was a romance, it was hardly romantic. Treats had all the tenacity and ferocity of a passionate one-night tryst, but the energy imparted felt unsustainable: converted and not created; begotten, not made. And after a dubious, guilty-by-association feature on then labelmate’s MAYA, among other things, it would have made sense for Sleigh Bells to suffer the tragic fate of many BNM alumni and disappear into a commercial irrelevance, the fodder of Streisand-Rogen joint-billing film trailers, or something.
Yet after an election-cycle-long hiatus spent grinding their chops, Sleigh Bells are returned with a self-styled don’t-call-it-a-comeback. Self-produced, Jessica Rabbit provides a retrospective of each punctuated moment in their shared, fractured history: the emblematic opening track “It’s Just Us Now” dabbles in the metal-tinged pop of Reign of Terror — beginning with what could pass as a “Master of Puppets” quote — proffering a Lewis-Jackson-inspired coda straight off of 2013’s Bitter Rivals. Yet the title and lyrics both evoke a loneliness and misanthropy that, to my mind, stand at odds with the enduring memory of any particular heyday.
Jessica Rabbit offers a thoroughly enjoyable, though largely predictable listen. It is a restrained record: a logical follow-up, aware of past excesses, proffering few surprises. “I Can’t Stand You Anymore” — complete with Miller’s dad-rock riffage and Krauss’s full-throated, ginger-fanged vocals — is simply “Crown on the Ground” simulacrum. The latter factor, though, I must say, is as brilliant and as pop-suited as ever, reminiscent of, dare I say, a younger, more relaxed Christina.
For over a half decade, an uncanny unpredictability and ferocious resilience have been Sleigh Bells’s stock and trade, pairing to make brain-exercising, head-banging noise-pop that not only offered an olive branch but, in a communicative way, navigated generic boundaries. Jessica Rabbit does not feel challenging, nor does it feel inviting. The adolescent only hopes to participate.
Pitchfork 59
Having watched the shelf life for buzz bands grow ever shorter during the late ’00s, Sleigh Bells seemed to understand the need to make the most of their moment. In the wake of their breakthrough debut Treats they worked fast, firing off a couple more LPs within a year of each other, as if trying to refuse the world the chance to forget about them. Though it suffered the inevitable diminishing returns expected from a band that got everything right the first time around, 2012’s Reign of Terror nearly matched the blunt force of their debut, while distinguishing itself just enough with its arena-rock lean. But by their third effort 2013’s Bitter Rivals, the sugar rush had become a headache. The album was genuinely obnoxious in a way its predecessors had only pretended to be, and almost as troubling for a band whose power stemmed from their laser focus—their resolve to drive a single idea, brick on the gas pedal, head first through any obstacle in its path—it was strangely noncommittal.
For their fourth album, Sleigh Bells did something inherently risky for a band so of-the-moment: They took their time, piecing together Jessica Rabbit in stops and starts over three years, and it sounds like it. Recorded in part with Mike Elizondo, the seasoned Los Angeles producer best known for glossing up records for Eminem and his Shady/Aftermath cohorts, it’s a hodgepodge of clashing sounds and concepts that’s united only by its indiscriminate maximalism. Anybody holding out hope for another great, singular inspiration to strike the band again the way it did on their distortion-addled debut probably won’t find it even worth a cursory stream. What the album lacks in vision, though, it attempts to compensate for through sheer exertion. If nothing else, the duo has never seemed to be trying harder than they are here, so although Jessica Rabbit is even more scattershot than Bitter Rivals was, it at least has a sense of showmanship that album didn’t.
The album also smartly runs with the one thing that Bitter Rivals did right: giving more control to singer Alexis Krauss. Krauss had always been the face of Sleigh Bells, their head cheerleader and fun ambassador. Her past as a member of a teen-pop band was central to the group’s mythos, their link to the very music they were subverting. But as integral as she was to the band’s image, Treats didn’t give her all that much to do. Derek Miller’s compressed guitars were so loud, so blown out, that often all Krauss could do was play against them, injecting her airy voice here and there, and even then mostly to make the guitars feel that much heavier in comparison.
On subsequent efforts, Krauss has dialed up the ferocity to the point where she’s no longer juxtaposed against the fray—she is the fray. And as she takes on increased songwriting responsibilities on Jessica Rabbit, she’s also seized the chance to show off her full vocal range. On “Rule Number One,” her voice climbs from a Kesha sneer to a robust Xtina wail as she belts “POP ROCKS AND COKE MAKE YOUR HEAD EXPLODE!” over Miller’s hair-metal riffage. Somehow, she’s even louder than the guitars.
While Krauss relishes the opportunity to play the pop star she never got an actual chance to be, Miller succumbs to a reduced role. His spliced guitars propel “Crucible,” an admirably spirited mashup of circa-’87 Whitney Houston and Licensed to Ill-era Beastie Boys, but it’s hard to even guess what hand he might have had on the Elizondo co-production “I Can Only Stare,” a guitar-free, high-drama pop number closer to something you’d find on a Leona Lewis record than anything on Treats. Similarly, the brooding, EDM-tinged “Unlimited Dark Paths,” as with far too many Elizondo productions, sounds like it was somehow conceived with Skylar Grey in mind.
Even when Jessica Rabbit treads into generic territory, Krauss manages to leave a personal stamp on the material. “I was dreaming of a dead end street that we used to run down,” she sings on “Lightning Turns Sawdust Gold,” over a slinky, lighter-waving groove more than a little inspired by Santigold’s “Disparate Youth.” Elsewhere she calls out a partner who wastes a Friday night getting high and watching The Lion King, the kind of specific, seemingly autobiographic detail that rarely made its way into the first couple Sleigh Bells records. She takes ownership of these songs in a way she never did before.
So Jessica Rabbit is Krauss’s show, and she’s a show worth watching. The problem is it’s just not very catchy. On their first two albums, Sleigh Bells always had a granite hook to balance out the volume. But too many of these songs are just bluster in search of a purpose. Casualties of the duo’s noncommittal approach, they fall into a thankless gray area, too tinkered-over to function as punk, yet too haphazard to be great pop.