Despite their connections to the
New York rock scene -- the band is based in Brooklyn's Williamsburg district and keyboardist/sound manipulator
David Andrew Sitek has produced releases by
the Liars and
the Yeah Yeah Yeahs --
TV on the Radio's debut EP,
Young Liars, is difficult to place, musically or geographically speaking. The angular, arty feel that informs the bands that
Sitek has worked with is evident in
TV on the Radio's music too, but in a cool, implosive way; combined with the keyboards and electronics that make up the backbone of their songs and
Tunde Adebimpe's richly melancholy vocals, they don't sound like any other band out there. Elements of
electronica,
post-rock,
film music, even
spirituals and
traditional African vocal music combine and recombine throughout
Young Liars' five songs so organically that it's clear that
TV on the Radio isn't striving to be "eclectic" or "atmospheric": the band is simply using their naturally diverse elements and influences to create something wholly distinctive. And
Young Liars delivers just that, starting with the opening track,
"Satellite," which begins with a martial, crunchy drumbeat and ominously droning synths before blossoming out into flutes and
Adebimpe's close harmonies.
Sitek and
Adebimpe's collaboration is nothing less than inspired, with
Sitek's skills as a sound sculptor providing the perfect foil for
Adebimpe, who is something of a rarity in the world of indie music: a vocalist who can really sing. His falsetto on
"Staring at the Sun" gives it an added depth, while his circular, layered vocals on the stunning
"Blind" make the song's simple lyrics ("I seen a girl with a guy/Her hair like yours from what I remember/It's been so long since last December") truly moving. Likewise,
"Young Liars" itself conveys a soulful paranoia that ties into the
spiritual undercurrent of the entire EP and is expressed most literally by its hidden track, a radical cover of
the Pixies'
"Mr. Grieves." Part
doo wop and part
spiritual, it's almost completely unrecognizable to the original, but once again it proves that
TV on the Radio doesn't travel obvious routes. More promising than most full-length debuts,
Young Liars needs to be heard by anyone who values smart, challenging music. ~ Heather Phares