
Excerpted from the journals of Dr. Mer La Jeune, Physician, S.S Livingston, year of our Lord 1807 ~ "Landing at the first sight of the
Islands, our party was met by an astonishing sight. All about the beach, corned beasts frolicked and grazed. These are much like our horses but
leaner and somehow unearthly. Yet, this was to be the least of our surprises. As the Archipelago opens to us, each islet delivers up new wonders to outdo the last: coroneted bushes able to mimic the mating calls of local fauna; salamanders with membranous wings where forepaws would be; wingless birds able to swim as fish; naturally occurring
springs from which flow liquids as intoxicating as those conjured in our finest distilleries..."
In 2009,
Idiot Glee is born in the Resonant Hole.
Friley, with fingertips that speak fluent Debussy but prefer to cuss in ragtime, declares via Casiotone, “I Did It Sober.”
It’s a manifesto of sorts: James’ veins flow with Ale-8-One, not bourbon.
His
minivan gives pretty much the only safe passage through that otherworld
of predawn Lexington—as he asks us on “I Want the Night to Stay”: “Am I
the only one who believes in staying up late?”
Each track on IG’s latest, Paddywhack, isolates the atomic essence of the pop song, replicating that perfect moment ad infinitum until the warm tides of melody, of rippling organ, of submerged synth bass, of falsetto oo’s have surrounded and engulfed you—feel flows more Mesmer than Brian Wilson. It
is music so compact and honest and perfect that I witnessed it
transform the beer-sticky, sweat-humid, furniture-deprived living room
of the Lexington house venue appropriately christened “Crib Death” into a
Gothic cathedral: a chiaroscuro of sound and feeling that is nothing
short of holy, redemption for all of us High Life-swilling lowlifes. Yeah, he’s that good live.
Scores of blogsick youngsters self-consciously
burying half-written Spector-rips ‘neath reverb plugins are missing the
point: what makes great bedroom pop great is truth. True vulnerability. True loneliness. True heartbreak. And,
as long as we’re messing around with overdubs, it certainly doesn’t
hurt to have a truly preternatural ear for vocal harmonies. Friley has nothing to prove, ‘cuz it’s all right there. The idiot glee—a code for eternal youth.