Thursday, 6 March 2014

St. Vincent - St. Vincent

A track title like ‘Birth in Reverse’ doesn’t create the most appealing mental image, but such is the surreal wonderland of Annie Clark’s imagination, where darkness hums beneath a colourful lustre of charming and cheerful eccentricity. Historically, St. Vincent’s sound played like a neurotic Disney soundtrack; beautiful and stargazy, even angelic, but harbouring a real edge, like a razorblade buried in a bowl of sherbert. In the five years since then her confidence has an artist has skyrocketed, and she continues with the magical strangeness of her unique musical personality, only this time with a heightened sense of awareness and self-assurance. While her previous albums always had a youthful shyness about them, the St. Vincent we have with us here today is her same recognisably oddball self, but the coyness present on her previous releases has vanished. It’s all there on the album cover – staring confidently out at you from her throne, with her majestic gown and her snow-queen hairstyle. This is a self-titled album, after all, and all of this seems to indicate a bold new direction for gorgeously-minded superstar St. Vincent, and here, after four(ish) long years since she last haunted the minds of every hipster in the Western world, she's back with a pink, kitsch dreadnought of an album.

Upon immediate first listen, then, this album signals a change of course in Clark’s artistic trajectory beyond the classically wistful coffee-shop insecurity that we all fell in love with from the Marry Me era onwards, and instead seems to have moved definitively towards a new frontier of futuristic kitsch, a retrofuturistic combination of the 1980s, the 2010s, and god knows when and what else. After all, here in 2014, the world is in the throes of a particularly futuristic-looking and breakneck-fast transition into god knows what, and this album’s standard-bearer ‘Digital Witness’ is probably the most apparent instance of St. Vincent looking outward as opposed to inward, as the entire song sounds, at least from one interpretation, like a sarcastic diatribe about our newfound obsession with validating our own lives in the abstract world of social media: “If I can’t show it, you can’t see me, what’s the point of doing anything?” The spreading tendrils of the internet have been the cause of immense social and cultural upheaval amongst the human race for the past twenty years or so, but so far St. Vincent is the only musician I’ve heard who has managed to address this revolution directly and effectively, as if she’s not even trying. “Pleasure.loathing.huey.newton” she coos in the song where the late Black Panther is “entombed in a shrine of zeroes and ones” – and she’s right; he’s staring out at me from his Wikipedia page as we speak.

I’ve never given her much credit for this before, but Annie Clark is an incredibly nuanced lyricist as well as a musical prodigy. There’s a lot being said in her metaphor-laden verses and choruses that I dread to think has gone unnoticed by my own self, but the depth of lines such as “a smile is more than showing teeth” and the syllabic revelry of lines like “summer is as faded as a lone cicada call” reveal a St. Vincent as dextrous in the brain as in her guitar-slaying fingers. Her collaborator and friend, New Wave Grand Duke David Byrne, says that “despite having toured with her for almost a year, I don’t think I know her much better, at least on a personal level”, so as a mere musical civilian I expect that trying to find a path via this album into the machinations of Annie Clark herself and all of her possibly intended meanings may end up proving fruitless, but imagery like “headless heroes heaped by the pylons as a careless sun sets on the West” is semantic dynamite, and this album is as lyrically dense and ferocious as Strange Mercy, if not impressively superior. The world that these songs inhabit is bright, colourful, and uncannily strange in its representation of the modern life of its creator.

Annie Clark’s always been talented, there’s never been any doubt about that, but it’s instantly apparent that on the musical side of her fourth album, she’s upped her own creative ante. Her Renaissance-woman arsenal of abilities is sharpened to divine levels; this album is an absolute wealth of sounds, instruments, moods and movements, all arranged, performed and produced tightly and with a clear embrace of the buzzing-metal-and-plastic sound she’s built out of the synthesiser love carried over from the last album. ‘Bring Me Your Loves’ is a stomper; the sound of St. Vincent thrashing around a chaotic chamber of whirrs, crackles and hisses, sounding as far removed from her human side as she’s dared to stray yet. ‘I Prefer Your Love’ is a stopping-point halfway through the album, a break from the laser-light synths and roaring guitars, it’s a ballad dedicated to her mum where she tells her “all the good in me is because of you” (how bloody sweet is that, aw); soft and shimmering and lovely in contrast to the track formerly mentioned. ‘Birth in Reverse’ is noisy and shrill but somehow St. Vincent has this ability to find beautiful melody in the sharpest and strangest artificial sounds, tied together with her voice that is part desperation, part confidence, part siren. The mythological kind.

With this album, St. Vincent has gone nuclear. Marry Me and Actor were sparkling drops of acid wistfulness, Strange Mercy was sadder, sharper and better, and while I’m not saying that this newest effort is definitively better than Strange Mercy in any way, shape or form, it has a clarity in its construction – the observant internet-age futurism, the blending of usual art-indie songwriting with weirder sounds and elements, the swift and effortless transitions between notably different but consistently vibrant moods. You can tell that this is an album that’s going to cement St. Vincent’s place in the pantheon of this slice of history’s acclaimed musicians. She’s ferociously gifted, in weaving her music, in sculpting her own image, in making songs from the (don’t vomit) ‘art-rock’ side of the playing field that can be beautiful, ferocious, uplifting, tense, abrasive, soft and electrifying all at once; exciting to witness, and so uniquely St. Vincent. I’d be surprised if there was an ear on the planet who didn’t find something joyous to step to in this LP, which has proven that if you’re searching for a modern-day musical idol to venerate, you could do a fucktonne of a lot worse than Annie Clark.