- Music
- 15 Aug 07
They’re a zesty bunch are Architecture In Helsinki, and never more so than on Places Like This.
They’re a zesty bunch are Architecture In Helsinki, and never more so than on Places Like This. Comprising a dizzying assortment of tones and textures, and including Caribbean rhythms, chimes, bongos and sassy synth in the eclectic mix, the Australian pop pioneers have created the sonic equivalent of a Jackson Pollock painting. Sounds are splattered with seeming abandon across their ten-track canvas, resulting in a colourful meshing of the marvellously free-flowing and the suitably tightly-reined. At times it all becomes a little bewildering, but generally their left-field sorties don’t take them too far from the path of melody.
The melee kicks off with ‘Red Turned White’, the combination of insanely grooving keys and Cameron Bird’s strident vocal producing a volatile compound. Bird signs off with the fateful, yet fitting words, “leaping off the end of the world.” And that’s the thing about Places Like This: it’s the sound of musicians refusing to be earthbound in their ambitions. Just listen to ‘Heart It Races’, an off-kilter rhythmic masterclass that possesses a “na, na, na” refrain to make the Kaiser Chiefs green with envy.
OK, so ‘Hold Music’ has an uncanny resemblance to B-52s, but hey, a few B-52isms never hurt anybody. Elsewhere ‘Debbie’ sounds like an invite to funked-up, party central, experimentation meeting accessibility at the midpoint called pop brilliance. It’s the sort of thing for which Modest Mouse are famed. And even when things don’t entirely work out – check ‘Like It Or Not’ for example – you’ve got to admire AIH’s willingness to risk failure rather than simply rewriting previous success stories. A mighty noise.