A FAVORITE FROM FIVE YEARS AGO
“Deep Sea Diver”
from the album Horn of Plenty
Original release date: November 9, 2004
iTunes
2004:
Grizzly Bear‘s debut offers up a lysergic brand of minimalist psychedelic folk perfect for those who find Elliott Smith’s early work a bit too accessible and upbeat. Marking an evolution from one-man home recording project to full-fledged quartet, the studio-recorded Horn of Plenty features a mostly melancholy mix of acoustic guitars, reeds, retro organs, and samples, all drenched in enough acid-washed effects to give Devendra Banhart flashbacks. Frontman Ed Droste’s weary, somnambulistic vocals work well with the slackadaisical melodies to create an unsettling atmospheric sound full of shimmering shadows. Songs like the opening “Deep Sea Diver” and the mesmerizing “Shift” crawl along at an almost funereal pace, the latter featuring what sounds like a scratchy Gramophone recording of a piano augmented only by echoing whistles, clapping, trippy found sounds, and weirdly hypnotic multi-tracked vocals. The expanded lineup and production budget have done nothing to change the group’s lo-fi approach, which produces a murky sound that unfolds like a narcotic dream you can’t quite shake upon waking. This is the kind of album you’ll want to listen to late at night, perhaps a few sheets to the wind, with lights off and headphones on to allow these creepy, quiet little tunes to worm their way into your subconscious.