Phish: Round Room
January 14, 2003 - The Onion
By Noel Murray
Album Review - Round Room
On past Phish albums, the Vermont band made an effort to record tight,
slickly produced rock songs. Only later, in concert, did the group expand its
material into freeform, almost stream-of-consciousness journeys through
popular culture and counterculture, finding fuzzy connections among Dave
Brubeck, The Grateful Dead, Pavement, Beastie Boys, and Saturday-morning
cartoons.
The new Round Room, released with little warning following a
lengthy hiatus, bucks that pattern, largely abandoning conventional song
structure for airy half-melodies and hardcore improvisation. But without a
strong launching pad, or the concert-hall freedom to slip in snippets of
other artists' songs, Phish lurches in the direction of formless, tuneless
vamping, not noticeably different from the output of countless music-minded
stoners who lack a recording contract.
Like its rock ancestors in The
Grateful Dead, Phish tends to confuse sloppiness with warmth, which means
that an otherwise winning song like Round Room's title track strains against
a mumbly, off-key vocal performance and incessant piano tinkling. Cutesier
numbers like the folky pro-tequila anthem "Mexican Cousin" and slender
ballads like "Friday" don't stand a chance; they sound like the work of a
poorly miked wedding band sneaking in an original between flat readings of
"Margaritaville" and "The Greatest Love Of All."
The rough edges only fall
away noticeably on the up-tempo, bluesy "46 Days," which raises the volume
and energy levels and approximates the kind of hard-kicking rock that a
big-time band is supposed to generate at will.
Otherwise, Round Room fares
best when it heads off into outer space, as on "Pebbles And Marbles," which
starts off like Steely Dan in a country mood, then swings back and forth
across one indelible hook, building in intensity without ever exploding into
chaos. Even at nearly 12 minutes, the song sustains its mood, perhaps because
its relaxed atmosphere best matches its creators' current mindset.
Article © 2003 Orlando Sentinel
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