Handsome Furs
Plague Park
Label ©  Sub Pop
Release Year  2007
Length  36:32
Genre  Indie
Personal Star Rating [1-5]  
  Ref#  H-0032
Bitrate  ~183 Kbps
  Other  
  Info  
    Track Listing:
      1.  
      What We Had  
       3:56  
      2.  
      Hearts Of Iron  
       3:35  
      3.  
      Handsome Furs Hate This City  
       4:58  
      4.  
      Snakes On The Ladder  
       4:30  
      5.  
      Cannot Get Started  
       3:00  
      6.  
      Sing! Captain  
       5:21  
      7.  
      Dead + Rural  
       3:00  
      8.  
      Dumb Animals  
       5:37  
      9.  
      The Radio's Hot Sun  
       2:35  
    Additional info: | top
      Dark and minimal while noisy and earnest, the point of this duo was to be as sparse and repetitive as possible with the help of little more than vocals, guitars, and a drum machine. Disenchanted vocals thinly resonate while cloaked in a frenzied undertone of fear and uncertainty, all punctuated by bare drum machine beats. Their debut is a record of melancholic tendency and heartfelt desire; a stripped down symphony relegated between city and country, and made for ears of either side.

      Handsome Furs
      Plague Park
      [Sub Pop; 2007]
      Rating: 7.2

      Early into "Handsome Furs Hate This City", Dan Boeckner sings: "Open the heart/ It's just a machine." Boeckner's Handsome Furs, his Wolf Parade side project with fiancée Alexei Perry, also locates its tired heart in a machine. When Boeckner told Pitchfork a few months ago that Handsome Furs were "basically Wolf Parade without the guy that everybody likes and no real instruments," he might as well have said, "...with a drum machine instead of a drummer." That trade-off seems to have determined their debut album's tone and texture, because each of the record's nine songs moves to a precise beat that's rarely changed or improvised, doesn't adjust speeds, and can't sense the intentions of the other players. Thus, Plague Park creates a feeling of listlessness and jet-lag-- too much potential and too little movement.

      This was always the band's intension, it seems-- even in their most prominent press photo, they display a disaffected, decadent boredom. Because each song on Plague Park seamlessly moves into the next, and since both halves of Handsome Furs make a living as writers (one of Perry's poems was part of "Chicken Soup for the Teenage Soul"-- rock!), the album is best approached lyrics-first. It's difficult to tell who contributes what, since Perry is a poet and Boeckner penned Wolf Parade's best words.

      As is often the case with Wolf Parade lyrics, the songs here scorn technology, "progress," and urban life. "Hate This City" lays down the band's philosophy pretty clearly: "We can get you anything you want/ But you won't know what it's for," Boeckner sings over weak static and a sickly, spare beat. Synths dance around a handful of notes to make it a sleepwalking lullaby. In "Cannot Get, Started", the title's comma forces a pause that acts in much the same way as the electronics on the record-- Boeckner and Perry loathe modernity, but need to make it visible in order to show you how it works. That anger sometimes fades into grudging acceptance, however-- and on "Dead + Rural", it's clear that the alternatives are just as disheartening.

      Handsome Furs make sparse and minimal music, but stating an intention doesn't remove it from discussion. The album is only nine tracks long, but for all its brevity, it seems to last a while-- and even has time to repeat itself. The album's middle section sticks to the same tempo, the guitars all use the same strident strum and texture, so by the time Boeckner sings, "If there’s a god/ He holds you closely/ Inside these walls" during "Dead + Rural", Plague Park itself is tightening around you, its airless, thin synths and florescent-lighting hum draining your energy.

      The power of Boeckner's songwriting is in its harmonic simplicity. In that way, his work is a lot like the Constantines'-- each artist wrings quite a bit out of four or so chords. Despite Boeckner's obvious talents-- he's clearly refined his songwriting gifts-- and the presence here of a worthy collaborator, Boeckner most excels when he works alongside someone who provides a stronger contrast. In Wolf Parade, Spencer Krug helps provide that balance; without Boeckner's typical foil, the results remain impressive, if not quite as compelling.

      -Jessica Suarez, May 25, 2007

      Review by Margaret Reges

      What sets Montreal's Handsome Furs apart from Wolf Parade, the band for which frontman Dan Boeckner is probably best known, is tempo. Where Wolf Parade dips into more than their fair share of upbeat, even disco beat-driven, indie rock, Handsome Furs instead pull back and strip down their songs. They're upright, elegant, and above all melancholy, swinging between sparse, mechanical blips and lush, throbbing walls of sound. The change of pace really fits Boeckner to a 'T,' if only because his vocal range is given a lot of room to spread out. It turns out Boeckner sounds a lot like Jeff Buckley, and that's not a bad thing; Shearwater also comes to mind, as much for the vocals as for the epic nature of this project, as well as Land of Talk, another Montreal band that concerns itself with making gorgeous, somber indie rock. But while Handsome Furs are as cerebral as these artists, they never get bogged down in pathos; they're fierce, and fiercely intelligent, and they want to hold your attention. For a song about a depressing small town in the middle of nowhere, "Dead + Rural" sounds practically exultant; it's Bob Seger meets Echo & the Bunnymen, all world-weary keyboards and triumphant guitars. This album concerns itself very seriously with the notion of "home" (leaving it, searching for it, and perhaps never finding it), but it's far from dreary; Plague Park is ultimately an uplifting work.
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