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Deerhunter: Microcastle
Deerhunter: Microcastle
turnover time:2024-12-22 14:39:54

Deerhunter wants to stay put. To be locked in

windowless rooms. To never age. To sleep. To be dead. In a way, it's ironic

that the Atlanta band gets tagged as punk, even when it's attached to prefixes

like "psych," "ambient," or "art": Punk music agitates for upheaval, but

Deerhunter seeks only stasis. "I had a dream no longer to be free," goes "Agoraphobia,"

and the line summarizes Microcastle: Deerhunter's latest is a complete fantasy, a

shimmering depiction of what it's like to wish fervently for calm, but know

it's not coming.

The harsh, ambient darkness of 2007's Cryptograms is mostly absent on Microcastle, replaced by blazing gold

and orange hues, warmly whirring guitar solos, pepped-up drumming, pop hooks,

and gauzy echoes of Motown and krautrock. The bolder sound signals that

Deerhunter is now less concerned with the scarring effects of loss, conflict, and

the passage of time, and more concerned with the ways to escape those

things—even if that escape is fleeting. On "Little Kids," a group of

drunken youths symbolically reject aging by lighting an old man on fire. But as

the flames rise, so does the sumptuous shoegaze squall and Bradford Cox's soft

insistence that those kids will "get older still." Freedom from hurt:

Deerhunter realizes it's impossible, but Microcastle shows it's a beautiful

idea all the same.

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