Music Review: Santogold - Santogold

In explaining to a pal of mine why M.I.A got the nod over Animal Collective on my best album list for last year, I confessed it was desperately close. I felt however that while Strawberry Jam blissfully makes my day every time I spin it, it’s more a triumph for that band’s amazing evolution than anything else.

I doubt there are bands out there aiming at re-creating such art or even hoisting around their copy as a beacon for a movement, paving the way for what is to come. Indeed, in the tradition of Animal Collective EPs following albums, they’ve put out the okay-ish Water Curses. More interestingly, we wait for (and impatiently too) the much anticipated debut from Annie Sachs from their stables. Kala, however, stood alone as a make-or-break for not just Maya but for the clique that she’s the link of, awaiting their opportunity to terrify and pleasure us with their brilliance.

If Kala had failed then this movement would’ve suffered a setback huge enough to dishearten men and women who have sacrificed everything just to follow the direction their experimentation is taking them.

Thankfully, Kala succeeded despite the flippant reaction Maya causes in so many who view her art as linked to something she simply cannot claim to be a huge part of. The hypocrisy of this thinking doesn’t even merit serious discussion so I will not harp on it. More important to us is that this movement continues to grow, and in various directions too, and not suffer the same fate a sub-genre like trip/hop did. (Never mind the fact that Portishead is back with their best album yet).

The follow-up success now rests with Philadelphia native Santi White, who is the face of the duo Santogold. (John Hill is the silent production hive.) Their debut has been pushed back enough times to worry anyone who’s invested time to finding out about them. You already know however that Santi’s an amazing talent because the press on her since last  November hasn’t waned one bit. Like most critics, I’d had already started reviewing this album. I already had attached high praises based on the six tracks that were out there tantalizing our ears. Now the finished product is here, glossed, remixed, and overdubbed to perfection.

And indeed it is near-perfection. The album effortlessly mirrors the heavy 80's pop sound Santi clearly grew up on, yet not once does she overdose on it. That ensures that subtle tracks like Lights Out and Anne reveal a clear Pixies fixation that is mixed with a funk intuition that hits its intended vibe dead on.

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Article Author: immortalcritic

Ive been a part of the Jamaican literary scene since 2001, where I submitted poetry to the now defunct Literary Arts publication. I also do short stories (something just recently revived) but the bulk of my output now is in reviews of movies and music. …

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  • Santigold Santigold

    "The future of music, today" - Rolling Stone 10 Artists To Watch. "Singing in a haunting, sensual wail...she adds a layer of softness to an unusual mix of synthesizers, dance hall rhythms, and percolating ...

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