Panda Bear Fills Sinister Grift With Charm, Melancholy and Genre-Agnostic Curiosity
Much like how Van Dyke Parks’ Song Cycle inserted bluegrass, incongruous orchestras and show-tune melodrama into conversations of out-of-fashion contemporary sensations, Animal Collective's Noah Lennox distorts the context of these 10 rock songs with elements of reggae, dub, hauntology, drone, cowboy chords, yesteryear pop centrifuge and dampened, diet ska.

Before Noah Lennox, the Virginia musician who co-founded Animal Collective and parades professionally as Panda Bear, made Reset with Spacemen 3’s Sonic Boom in 2022, he was putting out records on an every-four-years basis, releasing Tomboy in 2011, Panda Bear Meets the Grim Reaper in 2015 and Buoys in 2019. He switched from Paw Tracks to Domino in the middle of that streak, going widescreen but failing to really capture the amorphous discomfort of his 2007 opus Person Pitch, or, at the very least, upgrading it. But those Panda Bear albums were not bad by any means; in fact, Grim Reaper was fabulously predictable, especially tracks like “Mr Noah” and “Acid Wash.”
Person Pitch is the closest anyone has ever actually come to making a Pet Sounds-caliber album in the 21st century, that affection and craft lingers on Sinister Grift, namely in the grey brilliance of “Anywhere but Here.” Still, Lennox’s everything-but-the-kitchen-sink use of ecstatic psychedelia, looping samples, twisting and tangling instruments and a sophisticated, guileless kaleidoscope of melody on Person Pitch remains the finest thing any of the Animal Collective cohort have come up with on their own. I mean, we’re talking about an album that not only changed Grimes’ life, but an album that was lauded by Deerhunter’s Bradford Cox, St. Vincent’s Annie Clark, Vampire Weekend and, recently, the matriarch of pop’s strange and wonderful underbelly, Jessica Pratt. The worst part about Person Pitch is that Lennox failed to build a worthy successor in the almost 20 years after. Until now.
Sinister Grift may feature some of Lennox’s best work since “My Girls,” but none of it is reheated. There isn’t a song here that will trap you in Smiley Smile dispatches like “Comfy in Nautica” or “Bros” did 18 years ago, sure, but “Praise” does get incredibly close. Instead, the triptych of “Just as Well,” “Ferry Lady” and “Venom’s In” brightens a new environment in Lennox’s know-how, reminding me of the way “Choo Choo Gatagoto” splinters into “Owari No Kisetsu” on Haruomi Hosono’s Hosono House, where the melodies fold into different bastions of catchiness and rollick through picture-perfect sequencing. Sinister Grift is more textbook and recognizable than most of Lennox’s previous efforts, full of well-crafted, old-school rock motifs, kinetic immediacy and very few risks.
Lennox’s 26-year commitment to Animal Collective is crucial to Sinister Grift’s success, as we get digital percussion, piano, synth trumpet and Prophet-12 from Deakin (Josh Dibb, who co-produced the album in Lisbon with Lennox), noise from Avey Tare (David Portner) and “sounds” from the always-present and nurturing Geologist (Brian Weitz). It’s the first of Panda Bear’s solo albums to feature all of his bandmates. Thus, a standout is “Ends Meet,” which features Portner and Weitz, along with Maria Reis and Lennox’s partner, SPIRIT OF THE BEEHIVE vocalist Rivka Ravede. There’s some reggae fusion present, though it’s largely drowned out by the same sunny pop that vibrates out of the album’s other ace-in-the-hole, “Ferry Lady.” But “Ends Meet” is blessed by a pocket of baroque splendor, as Lennox declares: “Just keep it in the groove, don’t let up.” True to his word, the track sweetly paces onward.
“Ferry Lady”’s arrangement, before it turns into a menagerie of synth trumpets, wispy percussion and liquid samples, reminds me, if only briefly (and lovingly), of Sugar Ray’s “Fly.” It’s amazing what Dibb and Lennox are capable of when gamboling in each other’s company, as “Ferry Lady” trips through mellow patterns, bubbly scatting and copies of “lost in thought” pressed into different vocal mutations. These songs are not stripped to the bone like most of Buoys was six years ago; Lennox’s intoning on “Just as Well” gets turned inside out to the point where he almost yodels, and the forlorn coils of “Left in the Cold” collapse into the six-minute, uncluttered, atmospheric bruise of “Elegy for Noah Lou,” a song that zags into 90 seconds of chopped-up field recordings and sobering drones. The final dose of “Noah Lou” becomes a barometer for delicacy, as Lennox enters a vocal chamber not unlike Robin Pecknold’s on Fleet Foxes’ “I Am All That I Need / Arroyo Seco / Thumbprint Scar.”