*** Aluminum Group
PELO
(Hefty)
ýFrank and John Navin, the two brothers at the core of Chicago’s Aluminum Group,
are nished with the lounge/exotica revival that came and went in the ’90s and that
they sometimes found themselves thrown in with. Or at least that’s what
their fourth album seems to suggest. Here the brothers leave behind the sugary
pop confections of their 1998 Plano, embracing instead a chilly,
electronic synth-pop redolent of 21st-century anxiety and at least partly in
keeping with the Windy City’s post-rock underground. “Tom of Finland
(An Homage)” paints an unsettling picture of AIDS-era sex-as-science:
“Are hisýblue-green microbes teaming exponential/In the waters of my
eyeballs and my skin?” On “Good-Bye Gold sh, Hi Piranha,” Mekon Sally
Timms sings of a lover expecting cocaine but getting Flour. Throughout,
producer John Herndon of Tortoise builds on the futuristic sheen that
had already begun to cover the organic tapestries Jim O’Rourke helped
Aluminum Group weave on their previous album, Pedals. And though
the blissful Bacharachian melodicism of their earlier work has all but
disappeared, Herndon’s sumptuous sonic detailing and the Navins’ sly
hooks keep Pelo from sinking into a Joy Division depression.
— Mikael Wood
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