|  | Review:  |  | I have been listening to Bethany Curve for several 
                  years now. In fact, I have reviewed two of their previous albums, 
                  1998's Gold 
                  and 2001's You 
                  Brought Us Here, both of which were good albums 
                  that seemed to tread a border between goth and shoegazer. Flaxen is their fifth album (although i am loathe to 
                  call a release of merely 26 minutes an "album"), and I think 
                  it might be the best thing they have released to date. I mean 
                  that as a serious compliment, coming from somebody who really 
                  liked their album Gold. 
                  Still, both Gold 
                  and You Brought 
                  Us Here had a certain sameness to them, as if in 
                  each of the intervening three years, the band had not really 
                  grown or added to their sound. That was somewhat disappointing, 
                  but really, both of those albums were fine. Flaxen, on the other hand, is an album produced 
                  by a band that has changed and matured in the three years since 
                  their previous release. In music, maturity tends to mean "playing 
                  slowly" and, indeed, this is a slower-paced release than their 
                  previous ones. It is also, i have found, far more complex, and 
                  richly rewarding. Bethany Curve have always played their guitars through loads 
                  of effects pedals, creating a wall of distorted sound. All good 
                  and well, but even though i can listen to that sort of thing 
                  all day, i know that other people get bored with it. In contrast, 
                  the guitars here seem fuller, more complete, and more experimental. 
                  Part of it is the lineup changes the band has been through. 
                  Basically, vocalist/guitarist Richard Millang and drummer David 
                  MacWha are the only common elements across all of their albums. 
                  Since You 
                  Brought Us Here the band has lost long-standing 
                  guitarist Ray Lake and added both a new guitarist, Nathan Guevara, 
                  and an actual bassist (previously they were a three guitar band) 
                  by the name of Daved Lockhart. I think that this explains the 
                  increased depth of their sound.  Another change is in the drumming of David MacWha. Although 
                  he is the only drummer they have ever had, his work on this 
                  disc sounds very different. It is subtle and understated, but 
                  not muted or insignificant. It really sounds to me like Mr. 
                  MacWha has spent some time studying the drumming techniques 
                  of the West Coast Cool Jazz movement of the 60's. Perhaps he 
                  has, or perhaps it is just a sonic coincidence. Either way i 
                  find that i really enjoy his drum work on this album.  But enough overall comments. Let me examine each of the six 
                  songs on Flaxen. The album starts out with a light trill of echoed guitar and 
                  MacWha tapping the high-hat calmly. The song is called Automatic 
                  and, after a minute or so, Millang's voice comes in, buried 
                  in the mix and only half-heard. This part of the song is very 
                  Slowdive-ish. However, after another three minutes, the music 
                  fades out fully, and the song is reborn more forcefully with 
                  insistent drumming and loud guitar echo. Disaffected (still 
                  distant, but clearer now) vocals reminiscent of early Chameleons 
                  come in. This is very nice, but i am unclear as to why this 
                  is "the same song". It might be the same track number, but it 
                  seems like there are two entirely different songs here. Whatever. Automatic fades into Jettison, which features 
                  e-bowed guitar and a general guitar haze that moves along very 
                  slowly. This is a nice little poppy tune, with a toe-tapping 
                  drumbeat carrying it along it's languid pace. Up next is Omaha Beach, which is a short interlude of 
                  droning ambience. It's kind of eerie, but mostly just pleasant. 
                  Bethany Curve do this sort of ambient music very well for a 
                  bunch of guys with guitars. Normally i would expect this type 
                  of stuff to be produced by some guy with a laptop. So this difference 
                  makes the tune interesting and well done. The next tune is more energetic. Ironically it is called Sleep, 
                  and it features another wonderfully toe-tapping rhythm with 
                  lovely guitar work that just chimes and echoes. The guitarwork 
                  just builds and builds, and MacWha plays his cool jazziest rhythms. 
                  Also, Lockhart's basswork really shines here. I think this is 
                  my favorite tune on the disc. The next track, The Means, comes in with fuzzy overdriven 
                  guitar and strong vocals. This song, in all honesty, sounds 
                  like a lost Verve classic, and i do not use that comparison 
                  lightly. It really reminds me of A Storm In Heaven. 
                  This is not to say that it is derivative in any way, but rather 
                  i simply mean that the way the guitars grind and fuzz, combined 
                  with the half-heard vocals, calls to mind that classic album. 
                  However, when the chorus hits, and Millang and Guevara stomp 
                  on their overdrive pedals, the song becomes a transcendent wall 
                  of noise. Every time i listen to this one, i stop whatever i 
                  am doing in order to fully listen to the chorus, and i think 
                  "I bet this song utterly rules in concert". After the guitar fury, it is back to an instrumental with Utah 
                  Beach. This is a bit of dark ambience to end the album on 
                  a moody note. However, this time MacWha's drumming has been 
                  looped and slightly scuffed. Eventually, this is joined by a 
                  trilling guitar riff, and then the song and the album just fades 
                  out... ...And i am left wanting more, which is a good thing for an 
                  album to do. Bethany Curve manage to pack a lot of depth into 
                  a mere 26 minutes, and i am quite impressed. Their sound has 
                  grown and become much deeper since i last heard from them. Now 
                  i am really looking forward to their next release. Unfortunately, 
                  on their schedule that will be in 2006 or 2007. Still, this is a masterful release, and fans of distorted guitar 
                  work, shoegazing, dreampop, and/or atmospheric music need to 
                  track down a copy of this. Really. |  |