Review: Robert Pollard | Elephant Jokes

Guided By Voices Inc. (2009)
By MICHAEL PATRICK BRADY  |  August 10, 2009
3.0 3.0 Stars

Pollard doesn't care whether you listen to his music. The entire world could be rendered deaf and he'd still put out a half-dozen albums a year, driven by a need to express the twisted melodies and schizophasic lyrics that clutter his brain. Elephant Jokes is his fifth album just this year, and he has another one on deck in his Boston Spaceships guise.

What's truly astonishing, however, is that despite the breakneck pace, the immense number of volumes, and, yes, the moderate amount of half-baked filler, Pollard still turns out some gems. He has an eerie gift for memorable melodies, and it's put to good use on this light-hearted album, which burns through 22 songs in 45 minutes. The perky guitar of "Johnny Optimist" is pure fun, a typically abstract Pollard yarn about a distorted protagonist who nevertheless "comes out on top/Like a post-car-crash Jan and Dean."

He wastes a perfectly good chorus on "Hipsville (Where the Frisbees Fly Forever)," an interlude that would seem insubstantial on one of his many demo collections. Although much of Elephant Jokes is in the indie-arena-rock mold, the ballad "Desiring" and "Tattered Lilly," with its delicate double-tracked harmonies, both provide depth and contrast. No surprises here, just a reliable, workmanlike attitude with a few warm smiles.

Related: A real cut-up, Saving The Past For Last, Robert Pollard(1), More more >
  Topics: CD Reviews , Robert Pollard, Robert Pollard, Robert Pollard,  More more >
| More


Most Popular
ARTICLES BY MICHAEL PATRICK BRADY
Share this entry with Delicious
  •   THE FALL | YOUR FUTURE OUR CLUTTER  |  April 27, 2010
    If you didn’t know any better, you might think that Your Future Our Clutter is a recording of a raving old lunatic heckling a very solid instrumental band.
  •   SAM AMIDON | I SEE THE SIGN  |  April 15, 2010
    Sam Amidon is fascinated with the songbook of old Americana, and his radical yet tasteful reimaginings of traditional folk ballads and hymns breathe new life into a form often seen as quaint and old-fashioned.
  •   RED SPAROWES | THE FEAR IS EXCRUCIATING, BUT THEREIN LIES THE ANSWER  |  March 30, 2010
    Post-rock bands are like silent-film actors — bereft of words, they tend to use broad gestures to ensure that you get the point.
  •   THESE NEW PURITANS | HIDDEN  |  March 09, 2010
    Hidden is a real UK horror show, mixing grim, industrial beats with mannered, regal horns and a persistent aura of foggy uneasiness. These New Puritans reveal a penchant for æsthetic violence and revolutionary action that, though rarely convincing, matches the uncompromising intensity and martial tenor of the music.
  •   CLOGS | THE CREATURES IN THE GARDEN OF LADY WALTON  |  March 03, 2010
    Fusion experimenters Clogs take a modern approach to folk-flavored chamber music.

 See all articles by: MICHAEL PATRICK BRADY