Monday, July 6;,2009 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com 19 Indie stars unite on danceable disc Wilco is trying to break your heart. COURTESY OFNONESUCH Wilco (the band) has a good laugh By ARTHUR VELEZ Daily Arts Writer In today's music world, any pre- conceived notions of what makes a hit song have been completely left behind by the * rabid nature ofD the iTunes, blog- hype machine LP that largely con- XL trols popular music. No longer is it necessary for an artist to be able to sing, play an instrument or even go on tour. The technological veil of modern music production has replaced the emphasis on true talent and musical prowess. That being said, what propels songs to astronomical heights now depends on the inherent catchi- ness of a band's single. With no easily located avenue for writing a sure-fire hit, it's the general public's guilty pleasures that have dictated a song's marketability. Enter Discovery, averitable indie super group consisting of Rostam Batmanglij (Vampire Weekend's keyboard player) and Wes Miles (lead singer of Ra Ra Riot). Batmanglij's retro production - guilty pleasures abound - that combines elements of 80's pop, funk, dub and Auto-Tune-laced R&B, coupled with Miles's pipes, humor and willingness makes their debut album something akin to the musical version of a buddy flick. The album starts off at a fevered pitch, opening with what could be two of the catchiest songs of the summer, "Orange Shirt" and "Osaka Loop Line." The two tracks are marked by handclaps, hi-hats and soft synths that come to be the band's callingcards. The playful, futuristic nature of Discovery is obvious in the text- obsessed lyrics of the first track. Miles bashes his crush, stating "Every text that I get from you is so deliberate," and also pointing out a pet peeve: "You're never looking when you type T9." Sadly, everything goes slightly downhill after such a grand, dance- able start. Though the album never returns to the swagger of the first few tracks, its mix of popular R&B and indie credibility lends it an air of hilarity and makes things all OK. A fine summer soundtrack. The eventual downfall of this ambitious release is its formu- laic nature. It seems hastily put together, which makes sense in light of the fact that this is merely a side project for two extremely active musicians. On paper, Miles and Batmanglij should be the poster children for a hybridization of the blogosphere and American Top 40, but they can't quite make it. Rushed as it may be, LP certain- ly has the makings for a perfectly fine summer soundtrack. Vet it ec a fu So orange the n record At< the W where comic much due to of co-s and strum: wasw mostc - a pi ing a I humps in fron Milwa the do Wik and st eran rockers take rent six-man lineup - seventh in all - and is a series of meticu- asy, yet still craft lously crafted tracks, albeit with half-inspired songwriting. From in, stellar record the album's cover to its title to its leadoff track "Wilco (The Song)", By MIKE KUNTZ it appears that Wilco (the tour) Daily Arts Writer will not be a particularly pensive or introspective venture. But that there's a camel with an may not be such a bad thing. party hat on the cover of Whileit'sdefinitelyaseachange ew Wilco for a Wilco album to read like a 1. run-through, it's actually refresh- a time in ing in its lightness. With arguably ilco camp wilc more to offer than its predecessor some Sky Blue Sky, the record plays like relief is Wilco (The a retrospective of tried-and-true needed - Album) Wilco sounds, from Summerteeth the death Nonesuch pop to the mid-tempo Rhodes- ongwriter rockers of Yanpnee Hotel Foxtrot multi-in- to the barroom wreckage of Being entalist Jay Bennett, who There. For the first time in a long ith the band during its while, Jeff Tweedy and company critically successful period sound like they're comfortable cture prominently display- right where they are - and they're Bactrian camel (whose two having fun. and neck form an apt "W") Lighter rockers "I'll Flight" and It of a German restaurant in "One Wing" are deceptively sim- ukee is probably just what ple, while "Solitaire" is a modest ctor ordered. folk tune with a Nick Drake feel co (The Album) is the sec- supporting Tweedy's humbled udio release with the cur- musings: "Took too long to see / I was wrong to believe in me only." "Deeper Down" is aClear stand- out, with dotted harpsichord lines and guitarist Nels Cline's mas- terful noodlings filling the voids betweenverses."Bull Black Nova," easily the album's most daring moment, is a frantic murder bal- lad with mechanized guitars and a red-handed Tweedy panicking: "It's in my head / There's blood in the sink / I can't calm down / I can't think." But where musical innovation elsewhere on .the album seems more or less an afterthought, the album isn't completely without ambition. Mostbands admire The Beatles, though few, if any, ever intention- ally rip them off as a tip of the hat. Wilco (The Album) is littered with Beatles homages, highlighting in particular the sophisticated yet playful pop of Abbey Road with its arrangements, instrumentation and tone. Though there's plenty of Steely Dan's Aja and Television's Marquee Moon to be found as well - add to that enough compres- sion and sheen to make Jeff Lynn See WILCO, Page 10