You might think a record titled In Case We Die would be a bummer, but Architecture In Helsinki’s follow-up to Fingers Crossed is simply aglow with beauty and wonderful music. Lyrics like “carve your name into my arm, cos I long to feel your name blood red” from “What’s In Store” may read as depressing, but we’re dealing with metaphorical weather bulletins on In Case We Die with lightning appearing in three songs. This Australian group have credited everything from Ennio Morricone, Scott Walker, Curtis Mayfield, Ethiopian pop music, Wu-Tang Clan, Randy Newman, Faust, The Zombies, Brian Wilson, rocksteady, to tropicalismo with inspiration for their sound. Often when you mix too many musical styles together all you get is a gray mush, but Architecture In Helsinki do things right producing a bright and intricate jewel of a record.
You usually don’t think of octets when you’re considering rock bands but that is what Architecture In Helsinki are; an octet made up of:
Cameron Bird - vocals, guitar, keys, bass, percussion,
James Cecil- drums, percussion, guitar, bass, keys, backing vocals,
Gus Franklin - trombone, drums, guitar, keys, percussion, backing vocals,
Isobel Knowles- trumpet, keys, percussion, backing vocals,
Jamie Mildren- guitar, bass, keys, percussion, flute,
Sam Perry- bass, guitar, keys, percussion,
Tara Shackell- tuba, trombone, keys, percussion, backing vocals,
Kellie Sutherland - vocals, keys, clarinet, percussion.
In Case We Die begins with a Morricone slice of musical pie called “Neverevereverdid”; an ethereal Yma Sumac like voice lifting off over the sonically dry (think Smiley Smile) instrumentation including tubas, xylophone, and wood block. The Dadaist blend is appealing. It feels intimate and even amateurish, but you know that novices could never make music like this. “It’s 5!” is a singular bit of pop with a frantic chorus that swells to a crescendo that Lindsey Buckingham would be jealous of, “could’ve sworn that wine and one and four made two, but it’s 5!” Martin Denny is evoked on “Tiny Paintings”; a nice warm up to the pop mastery that is “Wishbone” drifting down a synth river leading to an even poppier outro.







Article comments
1 - DottiePie
Love Yma Sumac? Check out the delightfully odd ROYAL JONES
http://www.royaljones.com
http://www.mtv.it/music/archivio/newsitehome.asp?ID=0F8FA2E5D313468E895A5E864F22FF16
2 - Royal Jones
Hello How could I get you to review my CD? I'd be oh so grateful ...Thx RJ
3 - benji wilson
do these guys still play. i just recently fell in love with them. even on happy songs the girls voices make me cry. im 15 years old and im a boy. this is rather strange.