The horned beauty that is âLove This Giantâ
By Angela Espinoza, Arts Editor
5/5
Annie Clark has been the talk of the town ever since this yearâs Sasquatch festival. Better known as St. Vincent, Clarkâs music has evolved beyond previously similar competitors such as Regina Spektor, exercising her talents most famously on her 2011 album, Strange Mercy. Clarkâs immeasurable growth has made this a big year for her, even more so now with the release of her first collaborative album, and Talking Heads David Byrneâs third in a row, Love This Giant.
The two were brought together for a piece on Byrneâs 2010 concept album Here Lies Love, with Clark performing vocals on the track âEvery Drop of Rain.â It didnât take long for these multi-talents to see what more they could create together, and two years later, Love This Giant came to be.
But while Clark and Byrne have their own unique styles to share, the album does not focus on the two of them coming together. Byrneâs been doing this for a long time, trying his hand at just about every outside form of music, while Clark has somewhat recently nailed her own sound; thereâs not much more evolving at this point. That said, what makes Love This Giant so fantastic is Clark and Byrneâs experimentation with brass instruments, the true focus of the album.
The split second one starts the opening track, âWho,â theyâre welcomed with a bubbling silence and brass horns, eventually met by Byrne asking, âWho will be my valentine?â From thereon out, what happens next can only be best described as magicâwho knew St. Vincent and David Byrneâs vocals matched so well?
While the album focuses on the use of brass, Love This Giant is not so much a jazz album as it is an experiment in pop music. Any one of the albumâs tracks could be plucked and placed on a chart somewhere, and it would branch out and blossom, hiding the shame of the previous chart toppers underneath. This is what Clark and Byrne especially do best: taking something familiar and exercising it to its potential.
Love This Giant features something of an evolution between the tracksânot so much a concept as perhaps a trend. The album begins with âWho,â with the two looking for someone to join each other. We then come to âWeekend in the Dust,â in which Clark dominates by making her own set of evaluations. The two of them are brought together once again on the following track, âDinner for Two,â in which Byrne begins by describing each aspect of the potential scenario, with Clark eventually joining in. This trend continues in the next set of three songs: âIce Age,â âI Am An Ape,â and âThe Forest Awakesââthe latter being the only song on the album where one of them (Clark) takes the lead on a song they themselves did not write.
The seventh track, âI Should Watch TV,â bring Byrne and Clarkâs songwriting skills to their full potential, with one of the lines in the track being the titular âlove this giant;â the line refers to the appraisal of technology, followed not too long by a sudden melancholic turn in the track, along with the rest of the album. Melancholic, but not hopeless, as can be heard instantly in the tracks âLazarus,â the term of which comes from a Bible story in which Jesus raises one Lazarus from the dead, and âOptimist,â featuring the repeated line (sung by Clark), âhow it is is how it ought to be.â
As for the last three, weâre given two very intergalactic tracks (âLightningâ and âOutside Of Space & Timeâ) which bookend a very Mardi Gras-esque hybrid of party and ballad (âThe One Who Broke Your Heartâ). If Clark and Byrne are anything, theyâre delightfully strange, but itâs that which makes the album the absolute success that it is.
Love This Giant was released on September 10, and is soon to be followed by a cross North America tourâget your tickets now!