Sholi dares to dream while rocking
out
Avant-rock trio Sholi released an EP last year titled
Dreams Before People, and the band's self-titled debut shows a
similar affinity for the opaque messages and visions we receive in
our sleep. Although the San Francisco group previously covered both
Joanna Newsom's "Sprout and the Bean" and "Hejrat,"
a hit for Persian pop star Googoosh in the 1970s, with a light touch,
this new collection of songs brings out blacker, discordant tones.
Singer-guitarist Payam Bavafa, who logged a year and a half poring
over brain-wave data in a neuroscience lab, imparts foreboding
fragments of scenes, conversations or feelings in disturbingly vivid
detail. "They separate us in these rooms / suffocate the deep /
eat the self consumed," he sings in fragile falsetto in
"November Through June." These Thom Yorke-tinged stanzas
breed panic with what is implicitly said, but also with what lot is
left to a nightmarish imagination.
Ratcheting the tension is Bavafa and
bassist Eric Ruud, picking minor chords for their alternations between
quiet noodling and full-out roars, never letting any arrangement
gather moss. Deerhoof's powerful drummer Greg Saunier, who produced
the project, got some of the album's most head-spinning moments from
Sholi drummer Jonathon Bafus. His free-jazz percussion on "All
That We Can See" evokes everything from raindrops against a
window to whirring machinations, and is reminiscent of the
schizophrenic creations legendary stickmen such as Sunny Murray and Jack
DeJohnette once channeled through their fingers. The album's
best-crafted moment, "Out of Orbit," rises from Ruud's
sludgy bass, and frenetically builds as Bavara unleashes
post-apocalyptic imagery with unwelcome clarity: children burnt to a
crisp and feathers falling like bombs. "I know, I know it's
rhetoric tired / but all the unconcerned need a melody to smooth and
average / numb and nullify," he sings, as a melody achieving the
thrilling exact opposite comes to a close.
Listen to
Sholi's "All That We Can See" from Sholi:

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