13 & God - Own Your Ghost

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Drugi album grupy złożonej z muzyków The Notwist oraz Themselves. 13 & God stworzyli amerykańsko-niemiecką kolaborację, łączącą indie-rocka z elektroniką. Każdy kto "wejdzie" w ich muzykę przyzna, że 13 & God brzmą jak jazda kolejką wysokogórską - wszystko wydaje się możliwe: i śmiertelnie smutny hymn indie, przeszywające na wskroś emocje i dźwięki, hip-hop, elementy kraut rocka, melancholii i lekkość w jednym.

The unclassifiable band 13 & God was formed because of the mutual admiration between Themselves and the Notwist, and later came to include Anticon artists like Dax Pierson (Subtle) and Jordan Dalrymple (Antonionian). It's not hard to imagine what the American post-rap duo and the German electro-pop band saw in each other. Themselves created music of engrossing complexity, but had little aptitude for lucidity and directness. Meanwhile, the Notwist excelled at piercingly simple songs, but seemed to struggle with too many moving parts. Musically, all the two groups had in common were glitches, though Themselves' disturbances were strident while the Notwist's were silky and mild, and maybe that was the point. In combining their strengths, would they also compensate for each other's weaker areas?

On 13 & God's 2005 debut, the answer was yes and no. It included some terrific songs, but most of them just sounded like the Notwist, or the Notwist with someone muttering to himself very rapidly in the background. The record didn't feel quite digested, and perhaps it just couldn't have-- the clean gauze of Markus Acher's voice and Adam "Doseone" Drucker's Micro Machines Man patter are virtually nuts and gum. That's still the case on the long-awaited second album, Own Your Ghost, where we're zipped back and forth between their contrasting sounds so hectically that it causes musical jet lag. It's still a neat project with many moments of interest, but it's disappointing that the second album doesn't cohere overall any better than the first. More than anything, it makes you wish for a new Notwist album.

Because wow, there are some good Notwist songs here. The album starts on a high note with "Its Own Sun", one of those instantly gettable acoustic numbers that Acher does so well, which floats along amid softly coursing glitches and coos. It crashes into the hyperactively skittering "Death Major", whose fast-rap magic tricks seem to have scurried in from an entirely different album. And then, suddenly, we're listening to another lovely Notwist song, "Armored Scarves", where Acher sinks one of his trademarked cryptic-but-loaded refrains into a flatteringly warm and purring environment-- at least until Dose's helium-voiced sing-song takes over in the second half, blasting drum fills in tow. The dividedness of the record is especially plain here. Acher generally gets calm and luscious music, and then all hell breaks loose whenever Dose shows up.

There isn't really much to say about the lyrics on this album-- for Acher, they're about bearing melody, and for Dose they're about dicing up space and time. Like the group's odd name, which apparently is a mysterious apostolic reference, the many words on this album feel like fervent (even messianic) messages being transmitted in a dense code that no one could hope to understand-- except for true detail-oriented obsessives, for whose diligent attentions Doseone's music is ideal. This microscopic way of listening is precisely the opposite of the dreamy semi-presence the Notwist inspire, and those two extremes clash here. At the musical level, the collaborative lines are much blurrier, and from the syrupy woodwinds and drippy "Whisper Song" bass of "Janu Are" to the warmly squealing naïve-pop of "Oldage", there are plenty of signs that these guys can make beautiful and coherent music together. If only they could find a way to make their two strong, sharply different vocalists sound as integrated and natural.
-Pitchfork

Tracklista:

It's Own Sun         
Death Major         
Armored Scarves         
Janu Are         
Oldage         
Et Tu         
Death Minor         
Sure As Debt         
Beat On Us         
Unyoung