"When I'm working on the Sea and Cake, I'm making sound all the
time," the Chicago-bred artist says by way of explanation. "So when
I take a break, I just don't want to hear any sounds."
The economy that Prekop sought during his downtime is reflected
here. Even with layers of acoustic bass, whispery drums, piano,
organ, timid vocals, coronet and strings, the record -- made during
a two-year hiatus from his band -- is as expressive as it is
inscrutable, as suffused with meaning as it is spartan in
style.
But leave it to the soft-spoken singer to attribute his success to
others. "I mean, technically, it's not a solo record," Prekop
confesses, adding that fellow Sea and Cake guitarist Archer
Prewitt is all over the album, as is
multi-instrumentalist/producer Jim O'Rourke of
Gastr del Sol. "I was doing more sort of
experimental stuff and less traditionally song-oriented stuff
during the Sea and Cake's off-time, and I just sort of got bored
with that. Jim was the first person I asked [to work] with me. As
soon as he agreed, I abandoned my initial concepts of the record.
That sort of opened up a whole bunch of other stuff. Then I started
writing on the guitar."
Whereas much of the Sea and Cake canon revolves around free-form
jazz and pop, increasingly bolstered by computers, Prekop's solo
effort -- though undeniably similar to the Sea and Cake's sound --
returns to more natural instrumentation, like guitar, bass and
drums, as well as strings and sundry percussion. "I consider this
new record like a continuum of what I'm doing with the Sea and
Cake, but in some ways I think it's a response to [1997's] The
Fawn ... not super-deliberately, [but] I needed to be as
organic as possible."p>
Although the pendulum may be swinging toward less contrived sounds,
Sam Prekop offers little by way of structure. With the
exception of the last track, "So Shy," there's little in the way of
melodic sing-alongs like The Fawn's "Sporting Life" or
"Jacking the Ball" off the band's self-titled '94 debut.
"It's not like I had to do something entirely different than the
Sea and Cake," Prekop explains. "That wasn't the reason behind
this. But because this is done with other people, of course it's
different. I still consider them a part of a certain lineage from
record to record, and this is still somewhat in that realm."
HEIDI SHERMAN(February 12, 1999)
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