
Future Islands--"Tin Man"
Seth
One of my favorite musical discoveries of 2010 was the Baltimore-based "post-wave" band Future Islands. While this may be a meaningless label (though what isn't these days?) the combination of New Order/the Knife-esque rhythms and electronic textures with folky vocals is pretty impossible to fit into any neat, pre-conceived box. Future Islands is such a thrilling group because they manage to unite the insistent thump of electro and the expansive storytelling of folk rock--which should be an abject disaster--in a way that feels completely natural and familiar. Nowhere do they do this better than on album highlight "Tin Man."
Initially released in May, I discovered In Evening Air in October, which was the ideal time to come to this, a perfect fall record. "Tin Man" is the best example of the band's ability to write songs that contain the same anxious/comfortable and warm/chilly dichotomy present in the autumn months. Central to the success of Future Islands is singer Samuel T. Herring's voice and lyrical conceits.
"Tin Man" opens with a couplet that starts with startling directness before dissolving into the impossibly vague: "You couldn't possibly know how much you mean to me/ You couldn't always view inside my tarot." Delivered in Herring's uncannily Tom Waits-esque Carnival Barker in Limbo wail, the line is the first in a series of contradictions, juxtapositions and metaphors that forms an obtuse meditation on the transience of life. Without developing a specific and linear narrative, Herring sketches a picture of the ephemeral beauty of an inconstant world.
Perhaps what's most striking about the song is how glaring it seems that it could fall apart at any second. Herring sings with a theatrical flair that would feel at home fronting a boozy second-rate circus band. The most striking musical aspect of the song--the steel drum--initially seems out of place but ends up driving the entire thing to the finish line, playing an interval so uncertain as to color the deliberately opaque lyrics. Underneath, the band works a tight, meticulously controlled electro-pop rager that could easily be recalibrated into a dance-floor filler. The result is a set of disparate genre elements that, against the odds, manages to cohere into a magical three minutes.
The remainder of In Evening Air is equally rewarding and unlikely, although nothing quite hits the rarefied heights of "Tin Man." Future Islands are a band of no small ambition whose sophomore album presages great things. Anyone who could write a pop song packed with Wizard of Oz imagery that plumbs the depths of the human condition like New Order at a theme park deserves to be taken seriously.