Tame Impala - Currents (2015) MP3@320kbps Beolab1700
Tame Impala - Currents
Artist...............: Tame Impala
Album................: Currents
Genre................: Indie
Source...............: WEB FLAC
Year.................: 2015
Codec................: LAME 3.99
Version..............: MPEG 1 Layer III
Quality..............: Insane, (avg. bitrate: 320kbps)
Channels.............: Joint Stereo / 44100 hz
Tags.................: ID3 v1.1, ID3 v2.3
Information..........:
Posted by............: Beolab1700 on 13/07/2015
Tracklisting
Let It Happen
Nangs
The Moment
Yes I'm Changing
Eventually
Gossip
The Less I Know The Better
Past Life
Disciples
'Cause I'm A Man
Reality In Motion
Love_Paranoia
New Person, Same Old Mistakes
Youâ™ve probably heard the story about how the human body replaces all its cells over a period of about seven years. Itâ™s pretty much bullshit, naturally, but cast your mind back to what you were doing seven years ago: was that really you? Now try five years, or even two. Admit it! Youâ™ve changed, havenâ™t you?
Letâ™s pretend for a moment the myth is true. That would mean Tame Impala mastermind Kevin Parker is literally a different person from the guy who made the bandâ™s self-titled debut EP in 2008. And, tracing the quintetâ™s arc from the incendiary riff-rock of early releases to the paranoid fantasia of 2012â™s ‘Lonerismâ™ and this third studio album, that sounds entirely possible. Change, and how to deal with it, lies at the heart of Currents.
That much will be clear to anyone whoâ™s been following the months-long teaser campaign for the Perth psych supremosâ™ third album. But in case thereâ™s any lingering doubt, ‘Currentsâ™ begins with ‘Let It Happenâ™, eight transcendent minutes of shifting, zen-like disco that find Parker telling himself to go with the flow and accept change: “Itâ™s all around me, this noise, but/Not nearly as loud as the voice saying/ ‘Let it happen, let it happenâ™”. Itâ™s a shock, but in a good way, overflowing with deft production trickery, caressing Daft Punk croons and tightly marshalled bursts of guitar.
Parker follows that bombshell with a dreamy, summer-scented interlude in ‘Nangsâ™, and another pair of walloping pop tunes in ‘The Momentâ™ and ‘Yes Iâ™m Changingâ™. Once again, swooning synths are the order of the day, with the latter (key line: “Thereâ™s a world out there and itâ™s calling me/Itâ™s calling you too”) especially a work of dazzling beauty; the layer-cake arrangement suggesting Parker as a natural heir to Brian Wilsonâ™s studio wizardry.
At which point, we should probably bring up the elephant in the room, which is that, erm, there is no ‘Elephantâ™ in the room. Fuzzed-out guitars simply arenâ™t where Parkerâ™s head is at now, which strikes us as a fair trade-off from a producer pushing at the outer reaches of his talent. From the crisp, hip-hop accenting on the drums to the full-bodied bass and vivd synths, ‘Currentsâ™ is an audiophileâ™s wet dream.
‘Eventuallyâ™, a heartbreak anthem that may or may not be about Parkerâ™s split from Melodyâ™s Echo Chamberâ™s Melody Prochet, opens with an flurry of guitar chords, before promptly swerving into synth-pop. ‘The Less I Know The Betterâ™ – jokingly dismissed by Parker as “dorky white disco-funk” in a recent interview – steps out on a crystalline groove thatâ™s equal parts Hall & Oates and MJâ™s ‘Thrillerâ™, while ‘Past Lifeâ™ juxtaposes spoken-word verses with a shimmering, heat-haze chorus. ‘Cause Iâ™m A Manâ™, meanwhile, is Tameâ™s best straight-up pop song yet, a smouldering mea culpa for all mankind thatâ™s been ungenerously called out by some as being sexist.
Quality dips on ‘Reality In Motionâ™ and the maudlin ‘Love/Paranoiaâ™, the only moments where you just think, ‘COME ON PAL, WOULD IT KILL YOU TO PUT SOME FECKING GREAT GUITARS ON THIS BIT?â™. But he brings it back on course with ‘New Person, Same Old Mistakesâ™, which sounds like Led Zep riffing on a vintage Aaliyah tune and tests the upper limits of Parkerâ™s ethereal falsetto.
“Yes Iâ™m older, yes Iâ™m moving on”, sings our dazed-sounding protagonist on ‘Yes Iâ™m Changingâ™, “and if you donâ™t think itâ™s a crime you can come along”. Itâ™s sound advice from an artist at the peak of his powers, even if heâ™s no longer the guy you thought you knew. And thatâ™s no myth.