Mount
Chimaera was said to be the birthplace of the Chimera, a mythological
fire-breathing monster in ancient Greek folklore.According to legend, the Chimera had the body of a lioness,
and the head of a goat, with a snake for a tail.Much like the myth that inspired its name, Brasstronaut's
debut full length possesses a fantastical nature.Mount Chimaera paints some vibrant
pictures, all lush with jazz know-how and pop sensibility.The originality of that combination is
rivalled only by its surprising accessibility.
Brasstronaut
sprung onto the radar of bloggers and critics alike with 2008's Old World
Lies EP (QRO
review).Since then, the
Vancouver four-piece has grown to include well-known Vancouver guitarist/radio
personality Tariq Hussain, as well as clarinettist Sam Davidson.Their addition sees the introduction of
guitars and woodwind instruments, and the band's sound has broadened accordingly.
Mt.
Chimaera is
an album built on fleeting love, bitter regret, and universal pain, with each
musician taking the emotion of a song in a separate direction."Insects" delves perhaps furthest into
this dark environment, with solemn strings tracing a dark ambiance that sad
piano and wounded vocals fill in the spaces of.The murmur of a clarinet joins a trumpet's lament as the
cherry on top of this poignant song, as vocalist Edo Van Breemen pleads for a
release of some sort.
"Hearts
Trompet" on the other hand, sees a laid back, relatively upbeat number that
belongs on some porch in Alabama, turn into an infectious ballad complete with
pop hooks, orchestral synchronicity, and one heck of a build-up.Meanwhile, it's the slow, gentle fade
out on "Ravan" that endears the listener to the song.
Despite
the sadness and regret at the album's core, the sound remains ever intriguing
and engaging.‘Intense’ is not a
word to sum up the sound of Brasstronaut, but if you endeavour to pick just
one, it should be ‘ethereal’.The
album focuses on the organized chaos of each member reacting to emotion in his
or her own way, as a backdrop for the collective emotion of any given
song.The result?Mt. Chimaera delivers an
eight pack of wonderfully eerie, entirely consuming alt-pop gems.