Chicago has fallen in love with its local boys made good
Maps & Atlases, but it remains to be seen whether their full-length debut Perch
Patchwork will woo the rest of us.Mixing intricate fretwork, nimble
rhythms, and tart melodies, the album serves up twelve treats that are almost
too sweet to eat.The foursome has
always trod perilously close to self-conscious twee limbo (a common enough fate
for ex-art student bands) though the grime of Chicago's underground scene has
done a decent job of cutting their postures with a little sweat.Until now.With increased exposure (recently toured with Foals) and a
full album to promote, it's a coming out party, for better or worse.
Perch Patchwork is
the album you knew Maps & Atlases had in them.Their first EP Trees, Swallows, Houses showcased brilliant breakneck musicianship, folk
textures spliced with world rhythms, a sort of hick Yeasayer (QRO live
review).Second EP You
and Me and the Mountain took a more
leisurely approach, teasing out their compositions in a more masterly fashion,
neither a slave to pop design nor disdainful of a certain catchy verve.Maps & Atlases take the best of
both earlier efforts and produce an album that's intensely listenable without,
surprisingly, being at all gripping.Some have compared the band's sound to the venerable Can, though another
sometimes-aired comparison, Vampire Weekend (QRO live review), is
more accurate.Like their Big
Apple brethren, the boys from the Windy City lend their music a patina of
musical eclecticism by copping world rhythms on songs like "Living Decorations"
and "Israeli Caves".None of
this is meant to suggest that Maps & Atlases is disingenuous in their
delivery, but there remains a persistent and unshakeable feeling that Perch
Patchwork is everywhere at once, and
nowhere at all.
Fans of Maps & Atlases will savor some of David
Davison's most restrained vocal performances to date.The lead vocalist was born to front a band, with a voice that's
most comfortable in the stratosphere but can descend to street level when
circumstances permit.His nasal
textures have a charming pop lilt reminiscent of Buddy Holly when he keeps the
tiller straight and doesn't overindulge."The Charm" is a particular success vocal-wise, and a beautiful love
song to boot.The lyrics "I don't
think there is a sound I hate more / Than the sound of your voice / When you
say that you don't love me / Anymore" combine just the right amount of love and
anguish to avoid syrupy sentimentalism.Also, the superb percussion can't pass without mention.Despite stellar guitar instrumentation,
the drums have always been the strength of Maps & Atlases, allowing the
band to slip effortlessly from time zone to time zone in search of their
musical selves.
Ultimately, Perch Patchwork is full of great pieces that don't quite fit into a great album.It's hard to call a band that is just
releasing its debut full length ‘overcooked’, but that's exactly what some of
these tracks sound like.Case in
point, the title track "Perch Patchwork", which sounds dangerously similar to
late period Dave Matthews Band.Not what you want out of a young band in 2010.Maps & Atlases have too much talent to sink into
oblivion based on a so-so album, so expect a sophomore full-length release, and
expect it to be better.