Suuns | Zeroes QC

Secretly Canadian (2010)
By REYAN ALI  |  October 12, 2010
1.5 1.5 Stars

1010_suuns_main

Suuns' debut LP is pieced together from a few decent ideas and a lot of bad ones. The Montreal band's worst notion is to use annoying synthesizer sounds — the machines mangle rather than beautify their minimalist electro-rock. "Pie IX" is Zeroes QC's chief offender, making a mess out of spare claps, a wobbly synth line, and flat, electronically manipulated vocals. When a second synthesizer bit jumps in, it's more obnoxious than the first. The song evolves into something better, but nothing justifies that corrupted mix of synth and singing. "Sweet Nothing" feeds off irritating synth as well, but it swiftly develops into entertaining noise. Two ballads, "Up Past the Nursery" and "Fear," demonstrate how disinterested and milquetoast Ben Shemie's drowsy vocal style can get. And the lack of cohesion doesn't help — opener "Armed for Peace" shifts, for no discernible reason, from nails-on-a-chalkboard synth into a segment led by straight-up rock guitar, putting an end to any burgeoning sense of desolation. "Gaze" is a vast, competently assembled joy, and the funereal "Organ Blues" is pretty, but these glimmers can't save Zeroes QC from being a grating, ineffective bore.

SUUNS + LAND OF TALK + LITTLE SCREAM | T.T. the Bear's Place | T.T. the Bear's Place, 10 Brookline St, Cambridge | November 3 at 9:00 pm | $10 | 617.492.0082 orwww.ttthebears.com

  Topics: CD Reviews , Music, Montreal, Secretly Canadian,  More more >
| More


Most Popular
ARTICLES BY REYAN ALI
Share this entry with Delicious
  •   MOUNT KIMBIE’S WALLFLOWER POWER  |  October 24, 2012
    Sometimes making a statement from a corner of a room feels truer than making one from its center. Kai Campos — one-half of the London duo Mount Kimbie — believes that reasoning was crucial to his desire to make electronica in the first place.
  •   AMON TOBIN SETTLES INTO ABSTRACT ELECTRONICA  |  September 05, 2012
    If his 2011 off-the-cuff comment is any proof, Amon Tobin is terrible at resisting the urge to prod a proverbial beehive.
  •   THE PROPER INTENTIONS OF FRANK TURNER  |  August 28, 2012
    On July 27, Frank Turner played the biggest show of his life while surrounded by sheep, actors dressed as Brits of different stripes, a Ferris wheel, a synthetic recreation of the English countryside, and an unfathomably massive crowd.
  •   INSIDE THE GLOBE-SPANNING POP OF BEIRUT  |  August 21, 2012
    Pictures on walls have held great meaning to Zach Condon.
  •   DAN DEACON | AMERICA  |  August 21, 2012
    America as a country is rarely celebrated by its off-the-radar and off-kilter musicians.

 See all articles by: REYAN ALI