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Plants and Animals
La La Land (Secret City)
It’s not easy to label the kind of music Plants and
Animals make, but it’s easy for it to feel instantly
familiar. Maybe that’s because they record to tape,
and their records sound like they could have been made in
1972. But for all their analog warmth, it’s also impossible
to deny how raw and recent the songs sound, and harder still
to find anything else that sounds quite the same.
Anyone who took their debut, Parc Avenue,
into their home and hearts probably already knows this. Since
that album was released in early 2008 the band has played
over 150 shows, circling the Western world more than once,
including appearances at the Pitchfork Festival in Chicago,
Primavera in Barcelona, Central Park Summer Stage with the
National, and even one night in Columbus opening for Gnarls
Barkley, after Danger Mouse discovered Parc Avenue
and invited them out. But regardless of where it happened,
anyone who has seen the three of them perform live knows that
their big sound isn’t just some kind of studio wizardry.
Plants and Animals are Warren C. Spicer, Matthew
‘the Woodman’ Woodley, and Nicolas Basque, the
product of a musical three-way between two boyhood friends
from Canada’s East Coast, and a French-Canadian. As
their name suggests, the band has been a creature of evolution
from the start. Its first incarnation was entirely instrumental,
with loose song structures that built sound around themes
and came out like epic folk music. By the time Parc Avenue
was complete, Warren was singing and some of the songs were
even under four minutes.
Plants and Animals latest offering, La La
Land, is louder, and tougher, but also showcases them
their smoothest and most cohesive to-date. Inspired by a rediscovery
of electric guitars, amplification and fuzz pedals, it takes
us up and away from Parc Avenue’s Montreal-in-the-summer
vibe, and out into the rock n’ roll ether. The album
was recorded at the band’s hometown go-to studio in
Montreal, The Treatment Room, and at Studio La Frette outside
Paris—a brokedown old mansion filled with vintage gear
and a killer board in the cellar instead of wine.
Though plenty of wine went into the album. As
Warren puts it, “the Paris stuff is like a nice Bordeaux
and the Montreal stuff is more like a baked potato. Sessions
in Paris ended by 10pm, sessions in Montreal by 6am.”
Rum and cokes inspired the initial Treatment Room sessions
in late 2008. The album’s first track, “Tom Cruz,”
eventually came out of these late nights. As the Woodman tells
it, “it was December, pre-Christmas, so we fuelled the
session with rum and cokes. They made us feel like Tom Cruise.
It gave us killer smiles and made our enemies wither.”
Ultimately it’s this sense of hilarious
confidence that currently characterizes Plants and Animals,
and also gives La La Land its cohesion. The Woodman’s
drums sound bigger and groovier, Nic colours the album with
extra guitars and keyboards like a mad painter, and Warren’s
vocals have taken even more ambitious strides.
In many ways La La Land is just as
eclectic as Parc Avenue, but there’s something
more mature holding it all together now. As they might say
in the movies, La La Land isn’t a place—it’s
a state of mind. Plants and Animals have never been a band
with much interest in posturing or unnecessary theatrics,
but on La La Land the curtain isn’t just pulled
back, it’s gone entirely.
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