Critic's Notebook

Xiu Xiu

In early 2002, Northern California's Xiu Xiu released one of the most ridiculously challenging and morosely honest avant-garde pieces of indie electronic pop to date, borrowing elements of British post-punk, noisy electronic techno, and, most interestingly, the Gamelan Orchestra. Knife Play was hailed by some and cast aside by even...
Carbonatix Pre-Player Loader

Audio By Carbonatix

In early 2002, Northern California’s Xiu Xiu released one of the most ridiculously challenging and morosely honest avant-garde pieces of indie electronic pop to date, borrowing elements of British post-punk, noisy electronic techno, and, most interestingly, the Gamelan Orchestra. Knife Play was hailed by some and cast aside by even more for its histrionics and nonsensical wordplay — many considered picking it up simply for its influences, which are methodically deconstructed and reworked into a darkly cohesive and chaotic wall of beats, rhythm, static, and sound. Still, most people had a hard time getting past singer Jamie Stewart’s constant vocal freak-outs.

Xiu Xiu has followed up Knife Play with A Promise, an equally challenging and beautiful piece of work. The band now favors a more subtle approach and sparse instrumentation. But the extremely honest lyrics and abstract arrangements still root out more-sensitive ears — this is not for everyone. That this album may be easily passed over in stores or destroyed after contact with audio devices is truly a shame, further proof that the record-buying public wants only prepackaged, watered-down electronic pop. If you have a wild streak, an open ear, or a voyeuristic fixation on the darker parts of the human psyche, this might be the album you never thought you needed to hear.

GET MORE COVERAGE LIKE THIS

Sign up for the Music newsletter to get the latest stories delivered to your inbox

Loading latest posts...