Helvetia -The Acrobats (Digipak)
Released 2008. Second album. Comes with free button and sticker. Pay securely with PayPal. REVIEW by
EAR FARM Prior to Monday afternoon, I had never heard/heard of Helvetia. Since Monday afternoon, I haven't really listened
to much else. There's just a certain warmth and craggy fluidity pulsing through this Seattle trio's music that makes you
want to stretch out and live inside your headphones. In fact, if Helvetia were an apartment, it would be the opposite of
those stark, modern lofts lifted from the pages of Design Within Reach. Hell no. It would be one of those awesome brownstones
with a roaring fireplace, ornate wood paneling and bookshelves filled with dusty volumes of lost classics where you would
spend all night playing backgammon, drinking red wine and listening to records. Sounds nice, right?
This ability
to create such inviting sonic environments may have something to do with their impressive pedigree: multi-instrumentalist
Jason Albertini was a longtime member of Duster and both drummer Dove Amber and bassist Adam Howery perform in Arthur &
Yu. Their music recalls Built To Spill, Flaming Lips, Comets on Fire and even early Sabbath and 70s stoner rock in some places.
Perhaps best known for touring with Built To Spill in support of their 2006 debut album The Clever North Wind, Helvetia
has readied a new album, The Acrobats, that will be released in March of 2008 in time for yet another tour with Doug Martsch
and company.
Consider this an early warning then, because this album is fantastic. Recorded with Jim Roth (Built
To Spill, Apostrophes) in his Seattle home studio, it boasts a throwback production quality - similar to that of the Dungen
albums and Fiery Furnaces' Gallowsbird's Bark - where every guitar line is deliriously fat and fuzzy and bleeding perfectly
into the crackling organ and cavernous drums. And ultimately, the guitar is king in Helvetia's world, pushed to the front
to dictate melody, mood and dynamics. Alternately aggressively wah-drenched and peppered with deft jazz voicings and delicate
flourishes, this is the sort of album that makes me wish it was standard practice to list effects pedals and setups in liner
notes.
The prospect of seeing them paired with Built To Spill this spring should be enough for even the most casual
of gunslingers (those of you still rocking Wolfmother on Guitar Hero) to consider revisiting the lost art of playing some
live air guitar. While rocking out, you can thank Helvetia, just like the font, minus the c.
Item #101
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