Of Montreal
Freewave Lucifer F<ck F^ck F>ck (indie)
When creators f<ck with how we experience time and space, great fictions emerge: Clive Barker's Imajica, Andrei
Tarkovsky's sci-fi classic Solaris, and Godard's Alphaville. But what happens to artists when the flow of time gets
f^cked up IRL? When an hour stretches into eternity, and the voices in your head begin to echo through empty rooms?
If you're Kevin Barnes, the creative visionary behind of Montreal, Freewave Lucifer f<ck f^ck f>ck happens.
Isolation and uncertainty loomed throughout the genesis of the band's latest studio album. "The experience of just
trying to keep my head above water and navigate through the last couple years played a huge role in this record," says
Barnes.
These expansive selections contrast markedly with the focused pop of 2020's UR FUN, which was crafted for visceral
thrills and the concert stage. As it was for countless musicians around the world, the inability to tour eliminated one
of the linchpins of Barnes' creative process. "I didn't know if we'd ever tour again, so I didn't consider that side of
things." Denied social interaction and diverse experiences, Barnes delved inward.
Barnes contemplated how time functions in music and experimented accordingly. These new songs, dense with ideas but
short on repetition, feel epic in scope despite reasonable running times. Like the staircases of M.C. Escher's
Relativity, the discrete sections of "Marijuana's A Working Woman" and "Blab Sabbath Lathe of Maiden" crisscross and
pivot, confounding the senses yet commanding attention.
The imagery and sentiments that bubble forth from Barnes' lyrical wordplay prove equally disorienting. "Is it important
to say black chrome rodents?," asks Barnes on "Après The Déclassé." Phrases borne of free association took on new
meaning when introduced into a song. "It's like collaborating with my subconscious in a way. It feels deeply personal,
even though I don't necessarily understand it at that moment."
"Marijuana's A Working Woman'' juxtaposes oddball funk a la Zapp or Rick James with nods to Alice Anne Baily's 19th
century spiritualism. "Modern Art Bewilders" zigzags between baroque psychedelic idyll and synthpop tantrum, equal parts
Sgt. Pepper's and Gary Numan. Other influences woven throughout include realist painter Edward Hopper, fantasy author
Ursula K. Le Guin, cinéaste Pedro Almodovar, and erotic illustrator Toshio Saeki.
Barnes likens their compositional process to making collages from seemingly unrelated source materials, combining them
in provocative ways to reveal new meanings. "I wasn't working with specific themes that I wanted to try and stretch over
a three-minute pop song. It was sewing together a lot of fragmented thoughts," which ties in nicely to the reewave'
aspect of the album title's meaning. As Barnes explains, "Freewave is my term for wild and intractable artistic
expression. Lucifer is the angel of enlightenment and elucidation. Fuck is something we say when things are going really
well, or really badly."
As for anything else going on behind the scenes during the genesis of Freewave Lucifer f<ck f^ck f>ck, Barnes opts to
preserve the mystery. "Sometimes in the past, I felt it was important for people to know certain things, so they could
get into a specific headspace." Not this time. "The last couple of years laid a heavy trip on everybody's psyche. There
are plenty of universal things here to identify with."
credits
released July 29, 2022
Price
Genre
Format
LP - 1 disk
Release
09-09-2022
Label
Item-nr
981140
EAN
0644110046215
Availability
Not in stock
Tracks
Title
Artist
1
MARIJUANA'S A WORKING WOMAN
2
OFRENDA-FLANGER-EGO-A GOGO
3
BLAB SABBATH LATHE OF MAIDEN
4
APRES THEE DECLASSE
5
MODERN ART BEWILDERS
6
NIGHTSIFT
7
HMMM