Album Reviews
Heart continues Electr-o-Pura's slow dive into abstraction, incorporating electronic grooves into such songs as "Moby Octopad" and "Autumn Sweater." But throughout, Yo La Tengo maintain a tension between aural deconstruction and sharp songwriting. The album has its share of perfect pop songs: "Sugarcube" is an ethereal, romantic gem, while "Shadows," an austere, velveteen ballad driven by Hubley's alluring whisper, could have been a standard in another era.
If anything, Heart proves that Yo La Tengo can master nearly any pop style, from the bossa-nova swoon of "Center of Gravity" to the pedal steel guitar twang of "One PM Again," which evokes a scratchy country radio station heard on a late-night drive. The greatest stylistic pileup occurs on "Spec Bebop," where a Kraftwerk synth drone does battle with insistent "Sister Ray" cacophony; the music's ominousness is undercut by Yo La Tengo's infectious joy at simply making noise. It's just this joy that makes Yo La Tengo stand out amid their indie-rock peers: On Heart they may aspire to be the greatest indierock, noise-collage, electronica collective ever, but they're also just being themselves.
(Posted: Apr 15, 1997)
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- Return To Hot Chicken
- Moby Octopad
- Sugarcube
- Damage
- Deeper Into Movies
- Shadows
- Stockholm Syndrome
- Autumn Sweater
- Little Honda
- Green Arrow
- One PM Again
- The Lie And How We Told It
- Center of Gravity
- Spec Bebop
- We're An American Band
- My Little Corner Of The World
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- Portions of Album Content Provided by All Music Guide © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC.