Drop
Our lad John P. Dwyer has been lancing eardrums with Thee Oh Sees in an ever-escalating flurry of records for the past six years. Since the release of The Master s Bedroom Is Worth Spending a Night In announced a new loud era (and excepting a few momentary detours into home-baked territory Dog Poison and Castlemania, for example), Dwyer and company have pum- meled a bit harder each time out, cementing their reputation as a live force to be reckoned with and leaving legions sweaty and bruised in the process. Late last year, after years of relentlessly touring the world, the word got out... Dwyer s moving to Los Angeles (fear not, still California!) and Thee Oh Sees are taking a much-needed hiatus with a shifting of gears ahead and a new album on the way. This is that album. Drop was recorded in a banana-ripening warehouse (no joke) with hair-farming studio warlock Chris Woodhouse playing drums; it s also graced with the presence of talented gurus Mi- kal Cronin, Greer McGettrick and Casafis adding horns and vocals. The result pushes the familiar polarities of the group far- ther outward than ever before. Opener Penetrating Eye might be the heaviest Oh Sees song yet, Transparent World and Put Some Reverb On My Brother foam with seasick fuzz, and yet the ballads, like the harpsichorded King s Nose and the lush and stately closer The Lens, extend their oeuvre into mello- tronic, far-out pop with delicacy and grace. This schizophrenia heralds the man and the band into an un- seen future in classic Dwyer fashion restless energy harnessed into exquisitely crafted jams, with an emphasis on the pensive and the paranoid in turns.