![]() "Ibi" breaks in with a woozy, five-alarm guitar- a warning call for the track's off-key surrealism and pile-on distortion. But, however symbolic, "Faces" is only a casual stretch, with follower "Ibi Dreams of Pavement (A Better Half)" serving as the album's first true workout. The contrasting titles alone- one direct, one Dali-esque- speak volumes. Just consider each disc's mood-setting introduction: YFIIP's "Capture the Flag" is muted and tasteful BSS's "Our Faces Split the Coast in Half" gets out of bed, trips, falls down, does a sloppy summersault, and gets back up no worse for the wear. Whereas You Forgot It in People was exacting and refined- each cymbal crash snipped to perfection, each underlying string melody was spare and to-the-point- Broken Social Scene is wily and flowing. This exercise in excess makes the ambitious You Forgot It in People seem positively understated by comparison.ĭe facto band leader Kevin Drew recently told Pitchfork that Broken Social Scene producer (and NYPD punching bag) David Newfeld "got addicted to the idea of trying to top YFIIP." He added: "His massage therapist says he might die in 10 years unless he changes his lifestyle." It's Newfeld's risky mixing and uncanny knack for coalescing myriad instruments and voices into a propulsive whole that defines this new album. Now, with file-sharers queuing up like mad and pre-orders bumping them to Amazon Top 50 status, the collective reacts to the furor by expanding and magnifying another six members join the brood for its self-titled third full-length, and the band's once-refined studio sound is blown up into a pixilated blur of blood-gush guitars and squall-of-sound production that's somehow meticulously unhinged.
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