Hundred Waters were one of a handful of
bands scheduled to play the Austin City Limits Festival last year that I had never heard of but
suddenly got really excited about. Somehow, despite my interest, I
missed my chance to see them then. However, I bought their first,
self-titled album at that time, and it cemented my appreciation. Then
came South by Southwest. I again missed a chance to see them at the Empire Garage, but finally got to see
them the next day at The Owl. However, the sound was poor and the setlist
fairly short. I wanted more.
When they announced their first
national tour as headliners, I immediately bought a ticket for their
local Austin show. It was at Red 7 on June 23rd. However, days before
the show, I realized that circumstances at my job would basically
prevent me from going. I was disappointed, because this had never
happened to me before, but I suppose after all the wonderful shows
I've seen so far in Austin, I can't be too upset. To make up for it,
though, I'd like to say a few words about their new album, The
Moon Rang Like a Bell, as well
as their debut.
[Hundred
Waters.]
Hundred
Waters first appealed to me because of the unique blend of folk
instrumentation and electronic production heard on their first album.
Right next to the swaths of synths, keyboards, and pads are flutes,
acoustic guitars, and hand
drums. The beats are
mostly synthetic, but parts
sound
like conventional percussion. The vocals of Nicole Miglis are soft,
airy, otherworldly, and almost certainly incomprehensible without the
printed lyrics sheet. The first track, "Sonnet", appears to
be based around a sonnet by Percy Bysshe Shelley, but the phrasing is
so strange that the traditional poetic format becomes transformed
into something entirely new and different. I think the strength of
the album is that it sounds like a perfect blend of both artificial
and authentic, synthetic and acoustic.
Right
after Hundred Waters
was released in 2012, the band moved from the obscure Elestial Sound
label to Skrillex's OWSLA. The new label reissued the album and gave
it a deservedly wider release, but the pairing struck me as odd. This
was not a band playing EDM or dance club music; the odd time
signatures, shifting beats, and occasional subtle and muted tracks
seemed to indicate quite a distance from those scenes. But after all,
I suppose there's no reason Skrillex can't have some good taste, so
why not be on his label?
When
follow-up The Moon Rang Like a Bell
finally came out in May, it immediately struck me
as a band with a different
mission. Long gone were early contributors Sam Moss and Allen Scott,
and also left behind were any traces of the acoustic. I think the
band may have felt the folk label was inappropriate, and they reacted
by ditching almost anything that could be construed in that genre. My
initial reaction was disappointment – what to me was their original
selling point was now nowhere to be found. But after a few weeks of
regular listening, I've found plenty to enjoy.
[The
Moon Rang Like a Bell.]
First
of all, the opening a capella "Show Me Love" is a great
performance with a great lyric. The
second track, "Murmurs",
might start off with an annoying repeated vocal sample, but once it
settles in, the vocal melody and the piano become something
beautiful. The
piano actually plays
a very strong
role throughout the album,
absorbing nearly all space
left by the forgotten acoustic elements.
The album might be primarily
electronic and beat-oriented,
but several tracks disobey that trend, including "Show Me Love"
and the abstract closer "No Sound". Standouts are "Cavity",
"Down from the Rafters", and "Xtalk", and the
only misstep is "[Animal]", which delves a little too far
into dance music cliché. While I might prefer the clever blending of
styles found on the first album, The Moon
is still a beautiful album with a rewarding intricacy.
All
these changes make me wonder if in the future they will edge closer
to dancey EDM or if they will rebound back to a broader and more
acoustic sound. When I saw them live at SXSW in March, they seemed to
occupy an entirely separate third space, preferring live drums but
electronic instrumentation otherwise. However, there were exceptions:
the drummer also had a rhythm pad and one song featured electric
guitar and bass. I was curious to see if as headliners they would
bring more instruments to encompass a wider scope of sounds... but I
missed my chance to find out. I'll just have to wait until next time!
Scores:
Hundred Waters:
A-
The Moon Rang Like a Bell:
B+
P.S. I
also appreciate that their name is derived from the wonderful
artist/architect Friedensreich Hundertwasser. (I have made several
pilgrimages to see his work!)