First Listen: Chelsea Light Moving, 'Chelsea Light Moving'
Stephen Thompson
Monday, February 25, 2013 at 10:31 PM
Comments
Font size: A | A | A | A

First Listen: Chelsea Light Moving, 'Chelsea Light Moving'

First Listen: Chelsea Light Moving, 'Chelsea Light Moving'


With Sonic Youth on hiatus, Thurston Moore's new band sets out to pulverize and polarize on an album of sharp left turns. Loose but jagged, playful but menacing, the music of Chelsea Light Moving still finds room for glimmers of beauty.

Chelsea Light Moving's self-titled debut comes out March 5.

Chelsea Light Moving's self-titled debut comes out March 5.

Carlos van Hijfte / Courtesy of the artist

Chelsea Light Moving's self-titled debut comes out March 5.

Chelsea Light Moving's self-titled debut comes out March 5.

Courtesy of the artist

Audio for this feature is no longer available.

In the chorus to Chelsea Light Moving's "Heavenmetal," Sonic Youth's Thurston Moore offers a moment of uplift to set the tone for his new band's self-titled debut: "Be a warrior — love life." But from there, Moore and his new bandmates set out to pulverize and polarize.

Even at the apex of Sonic Youth's popularity — back when the already-venerated art-noise band was enjoying the career Kurt Cobain had hoped to emulate — Thurston Moore delighted in confounding expectations, not to mention just plain confounding. And Chelsea Light Moving is, true to form, a collection of sharp left turns: "Alighted" rages and rampages and squeals for nearly eight minutes, "Lip" sounds like a 20-year-old grunge demo, "Mohawk" unleashes peals of guitar over a full-on poetry reading, and "Communist Eyes" closes the proceedings with two and a half minutes of blistering old-school punk.

It's tempting to view Chelsea Light Moving as a low-stakes act of liberation following the indefinite hiatus of Sonic Youth after 30 years — and, by extension, Moore's separation from longtime wife and bandmate Kim Gordon, though the two continue to work together musically. But Thurston Moore has always been free to pursue musical whims like the ones he chases here, whether that means making graceful solo albums like 2011's Demolished Thoughts or unleashing last fall's bonkers collaboration with Gordon and Yoko Ono.

Loose but jagged, playful but menacing, the music of Chelsea Light Moving (named, incidentally, for an actual moving company run by Philip Glass and Steve Reich) still finds room for glimmers of beauty. And, even when a given song devolves into an absolute shambles — heck, especially when a given song devolves into an absolute shambles — Chelsea Light Moving (out March 5) maintains Moore's enviable capacity to charm as he confuses.

Copyright 2013 NPR. To see more, visit http://www.npr.org/.


Filed in:


Also in Music  

News updates from WGBH

See a sample »

   


rss icon
Follow

WGBH News Special Coverage: ELECTION 2012 from NPR

WGBH Spring Auction 2013


Vehicle donation (June 2012) 89.7

News Categories