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7.31.2007

Pumice - "Pebbles"



Pumice - Brownbrownbrown (Soft Abuse 2007)

Pumice – Pebbles / Soft Abuse

It is incredibly frustrating when you sit down to research an artist in preparation for your own review and every bio or critique you come across lists related or similar artists that you have never listened to or even heard of before. For me personally, the thought always comes fluttering across my mind that I could fake a little knowledge and cop a comparison or two, but that damn conscious of mine always wins out demanding honesty and kicking me in the shins for even considering the thought. This is the trouble I have gotten in with the latest release by New Zealand outsider musician Stefan Neville, or has he’s known on dozens of cassette-only releases, Pumice. I am really digging Pebbles and it’s lo-fi psychedelic-pop cacophony, but reading the number of other reviews already strewn throughout the internet has made me realize that I know jackshit about the New Zealand underground… or really anything New Zealand. Is that where kiwis come from? Sigh. My knowledge of the South Pacific island is laughable, and though I am familiar with the names circling Neville’s sound like Alastair Galbraith, Tall Dwarves, The Clean, The Enemy and Flying Nun, I can’t say with a clear conscious that I have spent much time actually listening to them. But this is also the exact reason I am so excited to write about Pebbles, because I find the feedbacking outsider avant-pop to be incredibly hypnotizing and am looking forward to exploring the scene that influenced Neville in this direction.

Since the early 90s, Stefan Neville has gained a cult following thanks to his lengthy discography of self-released cassettes, 7 inches and CD-R’s with the majority of them being released under the Pumice moniker and through his own label, Stabbies, etc. A one man band, Neville explores a sound lying somewhere between Fahey, Jandek and Moondog, setting up an archaic organ immediately in front of his abbreviated drum-set and running his electric guitar along with everything else through distraught, yelping amplifiers. Though, as I mentioned before, I can’t speak for his entire discography, the Pumice sound appears to be an oddly enchanting mix of outsider folk and near-droning avant-garde rock with excursions into rollicking rockabilly, fragile singer/songwriter, and experimental psyche-pop explorations.

I honestly almost want to approach this album one song at a time, because Neville attempts a number of styles with each individual track, though he always sounds distinctly himself. Album opener, “Eyebath,” is a rollicking, jaunty electric guitar workout that is ridiculously catchy though bathed in feedback and buried in dynamic-less quarter-inch tape mid-frequencies. It is a dead giveaway to why Neville was picked to be featured on the forthcoming compilation of Fahey-inspired New Zealand artists as he transcribes the innovative folk-jazz into new realms of noisy avant-rock. The cacophony is set aside for the next few tracks though as “Bold/Old” introduces the more intimate Pumice sound and is a crawling, endearing piece of soft-spoken singer/songwriter vocals, sparsely feedbacking guitar noodles and acoustic piano flourishes. I find “Brownbrownbrown” especially interesting with its stuttering arrangement and absolutely hypnotizing melody. It proves Neville has the ability to be an effective pop songwriter, but he thankfully chooses to express such intimacies in experimental settings. Tracks like “Greenock” and “Spike/Spear” continue that method but in an increasingly droning setting and calling to mind similar acts like Sun City Girls or Flossin. The hypnotizing melody is there and effective, but it gets buried and teased in between over-modulated organs, minor drum freakouts and swirling feedback. If you have ever wondered what Jandek sounded like if would ever stumble across a hook, Pebbles wouldn’t be too far off.

Mastered by Yellow Swans member Pete Swanson and released by the reliable psyche-folk label Soft Abuse, Pebbles is one of those albums that initially sounds like insular bedroom experimentation but with each successive listen reveals more and more intriguing and catchy psyche-pop nuggets. Though maybe a little tough to approach for those used to more traditional production, Pebbles is a pretty accessible album and Neville’s songwriting absolutely sounds like that of a musician with a discography pages long. I definitely recommend this to anyone already into the lo-fi psyche scene or is up to the challenge of widening their pop tastes. As for me, I have a few decades of New Zealand underground music to explore, because if spurred an artist like Pumice, I am definitely interested.

9 comments:

seanh said...

awesome that you loved the album, it's one of my favorites this year. This album is a bit of a departure, sounding more produced and rock influenced compared to his earlier raspy, delicate emphysema folk. Alastair Galbraith is really the perfect comparison for this earlier work.

Another NZ artist you might want to check out, if you really enjoyed this album, is Clayton Noone. His solo CJA project (he's also a member of futurians, wolfskull, and more) has some similarities, though differs in its mixture of influences. CJA tends to sound like a barren punk or hard rock, a solo acoustic and electric after hours folk improv. Check out Impact Wound (on Tanzprocesz) especially, or Ironclad (LVD) if you can't get a hold of the latter. His sound really jumps around, especially project to project, so keep that in mind.

great post

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when an artist is still in process he or she is redefining his or her own style. Therefore, many of their projects are sheer experimentation. They have to know a number of techniques before they can be called real artists. However, I do not find it frustrating but just a little weird.

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Island living affords absolute polarities in both geography and the psyche - tranquility & isolation. This duality is present in the music of Pumice - the eccentric, flummoxing and oft-gloomy one-man band helmed by Stefan Geoffrey Neville, a resident of the cultural hamlet of Auckland, New Zealand. Though Pumice’s skewed take on experimental folk and pop songwriting is firmly rooted in the outsider vibes of downunder stalwarts like Pip Proud and Alastair Galbraith, the fruits of his labor are singular in scope as Neville weaves his own personal mythology mired with comedy, melancholy, humility and tragedy and delivered with vivid clarity. Pumice’s pesky brand of loner Kiwi DIY - precariously devoid of fatuous pose - is a colorful, desolate soundworld unto itself.

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