Purity Ring | Shrines

4AD (2012)
By REYAN ALI  |  July 17, 2012
2.5 2.5 Stars

Purity Ring - Shrines

Ever imagined what it would be like to hear an angel-voiced woman recite a book of fairy tales in the back of a nightclub at 2 am as drowsy synth lines float through the speakers? Okay, probably not, but Purity Ring's Shrines approximates that vibe. On their debut full-length, the Edmonton duo focus on mixing Megan James's fluttering vocals with Corin Roddick's bonsai garden of restrained, chilly synthesizers — a formula reminiscent of fellow upstarts Grimes, Small Black, and Class Actress. In addition to the two primary ingredients, the Purity Ring recipe also includes a healthy use of chopped- and-screwed effects and song titles that resemble names of obscure Pokémon characters ("Belispeak," "Saltkin," "Amenamy"), with a careful hand guiding the proceedings. Although the band's sonic stew isn't particularly remarkable or consistent (instrumentation oscillates between warm and comforting, and distant and anemic), their lyrics have a peculiar charm that keeps them alluring. Disconcerting images lurk beneath that sweet sound, as James sings about a sliced-up sternum, worms, and caring about her grandmother's opinion to a frightening, obsessive degree. All fairy tales have their dark spaces, and Purity Ring's dedication to that principle is what makes their pop most enticing.
  Topics: CD Reviews , Music, new, effects,  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