Arthur & Yu
In Camera
Label ©  Hardly Art
Release Year  2007
Length  34:59
Genre  Indie
Personal Star Rating [1-5]  
  Ref#  A-0120
Bitrate  ~249 Kbps
  Other  
  Info  
    Track Listing:
      1.  
      Absurd Heroes Manifestos  
       3:59  
      2.  
      Come To View (Song For Neil Young)  
       3:25  
      3.  
      There Are Too Many Birds  
       2:56  
      4.  
      Afterglow  
       3:47  
      5.  
      Flashing The Lobby Lights  
       2:43  
      6.  
      1000 Words  
       2:40  
      7.  
      Lion's Mouth  
       5:13  
      8.  
      The Ghost Of Old Bull Lee  
       2:42  
      9.  
      Half Years  
       3:23  
      10.  
      Black Bear  
       4:11  
    Additional info: | top
      This Seattle duo made an album with soft, layered vocals that float over textural acoustics, "In Camera" is an audible effigy of a time past, and an album made for forgetting and remembering. Drawing sonic inspiration from the Velvet Underground as well as the studio experimentation of Lee Hazlewood, each track is a study in expansion, centered loosely around chiming guitars and swirling melodies. Grant Olsen's hazy croon is lifted by the smooth harmonies of Sonya Westcott, and both reel in the influence of Nancy Sinatra between the familiar crash of a tambourine and layers of guitar. This debut is built upon nostalgia and exudes an undeniably earnest warmth.

      Arthur & Yu
      In Camera
      [Hardly Art; 2007]
      Rating: 7.4

      Arthur & Yu's debut LP, In Camera (the inaugural release for Sub Pop's new imprint, Hardly Art) is cute, coy, and a little bit gooey. With twinkling flutes, wide-eyed boy-girl harmonies, and 60s folk-pop melodies, In Camera would be infuriatingly precious if it weren't also weird, druggy, and mesmerizing. Fronted by Grant Olsen and Sonya Westcott ("Arthur" and "Yu" are their respective childhood nicknames), the Seattle-based duo have doused their songs with a bucket of reverb, and In Camera's throbbing guitars, muted vocals, and mawkish arrangements sound more like the Velvet Underground and Nico (or Karen Dalton, or Serge Gainsbourg) than anything you'd ever dig up on Twee.net.

      Vocal duties are split between Olsen and Westcott (who, incidentally, was Rogue Wave's original bassist), and their voices are nicely complimentary, weaving together almost flawlessly-- Westcott's pipes are more fixed, whereas Olsen's voice seems to constantly flit from coo to caterwaul. Still, the juxtaposition of control and chaos works well (critics everywhere have pointed to the pair's undeniable Lee Hazlewood and Nancy Sinatra dynamic); on "Come to View (Song for Neil Young)", especially, the vocals crest and wane over jangly guitar and honking melodica, lending a curious layer of psychedlia to an otherwise staid pop song. Bobby Wane, Ben Kersten, and Scott Blue help fill out the group's sound, but In Camera's instrumentation-- while rich and beguiling-- ultimately feels secondary to all that singing.

      Olsen and Westcott have publicly copped to the little-kid themes on In Camera, from their adopted monikers to the schoolyard/pellet gun musings of "Half Years", and much of the record has the grainy, nostalgic feel of an old, Super 8 home movie: conjure unsteady montages of toddlers with smeared faces diving onto swingsets, waddling in circles through backyard gardens, pawing at bugs, tugging at their diapers, giggling and eating dirt and hurling their arms around other people's bare legs. The record does offer up its share of darker moments: the smarmy "Lion's Mouth" explores burgeoning sexuality via vaguely creepy, nuance-heavy lyrics ("Oh, we coulda kept it fun...My fingers in your buttons," Olsen mews).

      Like the Raveonettes, Jesus and Mary Chain, the Clientele, or My Morning Jacket, how much you dig Arthur & Yu is probably directly proportional to how much reverb you can stomach without wanting to clean out your ears with cotton swabs-- but if you don't mind a good dosing of echo, In Camera is an impressive debut for both band and label.

      -Amanda Petrusich, July 11, 2007
      http://www.myspace.com/arthurandyu
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