Audio By Carbonatix
Keep Phoenix New Times Free
We’re aiming to raise $10,000 by April 26. Your support ensures New Times can continue watching out for you and our community. No paywall. Always accessible. Daily online and weekly in print.
Frontman Matt Pond doesn’t care for the term “chamber pop,” and it’s a loose fit. His band’s sound is more Delgados than Belle & Sebastian, which is to say that though the quintet frequently uses strings for texture and its melancholy tone, there’s a sturdy indie rock undertone recalling Sebadoh, Ida, and Galaxie 500. The languid, lavishly melodic tracks are as comfortable as plush velvet, but for every few dreamy, atmospheric cuts, there’s a punchy track echoing the New Wave romanticism of the Cure or New Order, with a dash of mod. On the band’s latest, Last Light, Pond drifts further toward rock, dramatically downplaying the cello’s role while surveying an eclectic range of styles including twangy psych-pop (“Locate The Pieces”), Big Star-ish folk (“Sunlight”), and even nervy, Bowery-bound indie rock (“People Have A Way”). After seven full-lengths in a decade of existence, it’s appropriate, perhaps, for Pond to stretch. Though his band’s undergone several lineup changes over the years, he’s remained true to his string-driven indie-pop vision. Though the band’s not nearly as precious live as it may seem on record, longtime fans may still be a bit surprised.