If you are a fan of Los Compassions! early recordings, you’ll probably find
Shrag’s 2010 album
Life! Death! Prizes! to be the cure for the arty malaise that settled over them (and the listener) like a gloomy haze. Early LC records surged and roiled like the primal emotions inside a teenager, merging the angular and off-kilter feel of post-punk with the tunefulness of C-86 into an instantly loveable sound, and so does this. Built around loud and raw guitars, stop/start rhythms, loud/quiet dynamics, alternately shouted and crooned boy/girl vocals, and the kind of songs you want to hear playing loud all day and then quietly at night,
Life! Death! Prizes! is a thrillingly romantic, bleedingly emotional album for people who want some bite in their pop. The band takes whole chunks out of the
Campesinos! playbook, but makes something new out of it, something in the same ball park but different enough to be all their own. (Oh, add in some
Love Is All too (mainly in the wobbly but true vocals of Helen King) for good measure.) A song like “Rabbit Kids” (the best song on the album) has a tenderness that the
Campesinos! never managed, both in the lyrics and in the vocals. Other songs display this same quiet heart, some even manage a kind of epic-ish beauty (the lovely “Coda”), but the bulk of the record is made up of songs with a more desperate, unsettled feel. The skittery guitars, vocal interjections, and ramped-up drums of “Ghosts Before Breakfast” is a prime example, so is “A Certain Violence,” which kicks off the album with an untidy shove. This balance of quiet and loud, calm and jittery, emotional and introspective, is something
Los Campesinos! (and to a lesser extent
Love Is All) were close to perfecting at one point. Now it’s
Shrag’s turn. It may seem tiresome (and maybe insulting) to insist on comparing the two bands, but since at one time the
Campesinos! were the best band of this style around, maybe it’s not so bad to say
Shrag has claimed that title with
Life! Death! Prizes! ~ Tim Sendra