Over the course of
Wilderness' career, each album has been a darker entity than the last. Even more downtrodden and more languorous than
Vessel States,
(k)no(w)here downshifts gears again with half-time drum thumps, longer stretches of time between picked guitar notes, and increasingly simplified basslines. Written for a visual art performance at 2008's Whitney Biennial and conceived as one long, winding musical piece, it's almost as if the band shared a bottle of extra strength cough medicine before this session in order to slow the pace of songs like
"(P)ablum" down to such a deliberate crawl. Purple syrup would also explain the trippy vibe of the record, just as it would explain
James Johnson's deeply resonant and meandering singing style this time around. Critics were quick to compare his eccentric vocals to
David Byrne or
John Lydon on the tinnier and post-punkier
Wilderness debut, but the strangest thing about his throaty, subhuman attack here is not that he sounds more like a cross between
Ian Mckaye and
Cher, or that he slurs to the point where trying to pick out his lyrics is like trying to interpret the Swedish Chef, it's that his sluggish, yowling lines are some of his most cathartic ever. He waivers every note with authority, while the rest of
the Wilderness (bassist
Brian Gossman, drummer
William Goode, and guitarist
Colin McCann) lull as soothingly as a very loudly amplified band can. It's the exploration of a similar template as their last albums --
Edge-type guitar runs enhanced by delay pedals, hard flicked bass chords, and rattling tom fills -- but this time, it's more spaciously spread and dragged through quicksand. An ambitious exercise of restraint, it's a lumbering beast that's minimal but still feels expansive. Epic, even. ~ Jason Lymangrover