Popmatters.com -
November 2005
Title: NA
PILOTDRIFT
Water Sphere
(Good)
Rating: 7
US release date: 20 September 2005
UK release date: Available as import
by Mike Schiller
Tim DeLaughter has a record label. It's called "Good Records". Yes, he who
is responsible for inflicting two of the stranger modern rock radio
phenomena of the last 10 or 11 years is now in charge of signing and
cultivating new bands for a broad audience. It'd be a bit frightening if it
weren't so exciting.
Pilotdrift is DeLaughter's first signing to Good, and as one might expect
with anything involving DeLaughter, it follows the same do-whatever-you-want
aesthetic that's near and dear to his heart. Pilotdrift is a five-piece that
sounds like a 25-piece, a little band with big aspirations. This is the sort
of band who would probably love to make it big, just for a little while, so
they could see their tremendous visions come to life in a live setting with,
say, the London Symphony Orchestra, allowing them the opportunity to animate
their ambitious musical scores with more than a synthesizer-enhanced version
of the typical rock band setup. Water Sphere goes beyond ambitious, beyond
crazy, into totally fucking nuts territory with an album that incorporates
drum & bass as easily as it does circus music, and features a quiet, subtle
instrumental track on the same album as a nearly-10n-minute piece with
symphonic movements that may or may not have been heavily influenced by
Andrew Lloyd Weber (particularly, The Phantom of the Opera).
Needless to say, it's a trip.
The quintessential Pilotdrift song thus far comes early in the album -- "Bubblecraft"
is an absorbing slice of prog-psychedelia that could well have the masses
ballroom dancing in torn jeans and t-shirts. The defining feature of "Bubblecraft"
is its bossa nova beat, emphasized by synthesizer lines that sound a lot
like muted horns and violins, all playing Radiohead chord progressions. Lead
vocalist and primary songwriter Kelly Carr sounds a lot like Spacehog's
Royston Langdon minus the overemphasized diphthongs, leading us into a
vaguely futuristic world that seems far from our own until the refrain of
"work for money, long for luxury" hits. It's at this point that Pilotdrift's
seemingly far-fetched narrative enters the realm of parable, a reflection of
the unchanging state of the modern world, where the surroundings may change
but the attitude stays the same. Followup track "Passenger Seat" floats
along on a wispy loop of a guitar line and a drum & bass-influenced beat,
hitting the aforementioned point home: "Though things have changed, / We say
we're still the same", says Carr, and the point is driven home.
That's not to say that Pilotdrift should necessarily be noted for their
lyrical prowess. After getting that little two-song suite out of the way,
Carr drifts into the absurd. There's a song called "Late Night in a Wax
Museum", in which the wax sculptures come alive at night. Actually, I think
I've heard that one before. "Elephant Island" is a sea shanty and a waltz
(with a liberal helping of the circus) detailing Erwin Shackleton's
Antarctic expedition and resultant descent into madness. And then there's
the ten-minute "Jeckyll and Hyde Suite", a first-person character sketch
from both sides of the legendary character(s). All of these are worthy
subjects, to be sure, but Carr's lyrics don't usually progress far past rote
description, which is a shame.
Thankfully, there is the music to fall back on, which I suspect is the
point. All of these songs are so musically outlandish that one hardly
notices the words anyway. The transition of "Late Night in a Wax Museum"
from beatless ambience with the help of some Far Eastern scales to Pink
Floyd-influenced mid-tempo rock jam is nice, but it is, predictably, the
"Jekyll and Hyde Suite" that astounds more than anything. It begins with a
quick overture consisting largely of humongous minor-key pipe organs, but
eventually progresses into a quiet, mournful passage for Jekyll and a wild,
evil romp for Hyde, complete with transformative, largely improvised
transitions. In a nutshell, it's prog-indie-rock at its most outlandish,
which will either delight or repulse listeners. If you find the Flaming Lips
too conservative for your tastes, you may have found your new favorite band.
Water Sphere begs the question: How much is too much? For all of the variety
in these ten songs, it's hard not to long just a bit for more of the
relative simplicity of the instrumental "Comets", or even the comparatively
reserved menace of opener "Caught in My Trap". The constant change and
kitchen sink orchestration can't help but become overwhelming over the
course of a mere nine songs. Still, the musicianship is fantastic, and the
ambition is admirable -- add a dash of focus, and we could have the next
major indie heroes on our hands. Water Sphere could be our sneak peek.
- 15 November 2005