Audio By Carbonatix
Deerhoof singer Satomi Matsuzaki’s ultra-high voice sounds something like what would come out of Wayne Coyne’s mouth if he weren’t a man. She is by turns Nico-cold and Hello Kitty naive, and her lyrics sound like bizarre, lost-in-the-translation Haiku.
The experimental Bay Area band’s repetitive song fragments appear held together with aural Scotch tape: Stream-of-consciousness playing comprising simple but hooky musical notions, raw guitar splinters, stutter-step drumming and staccato vocals make Deerhoof an interesting ear meal.
A critical darling, Deerhoof has continued on even after founding member Rob Fisk left the band a few years back, just as it began to be appreciated by a larger audience. The band doesn’t seem to suffer too greatly on its most recent Kill Rock Stars release, Apple O’, which brings the listener into a skewed eerie dream world. In this world, lyrical brevity is beauty, exemplified on Apple O’ by a particular four-word song. The walking bass foundation of “The Forbidden Fruits” is accented by Matsuzaki’s repetition of the absurdist line “Leopard fur no store!”
When news happens, Phoenix New Times is there —
Your support strengthens our coverage.
We’re aiming to raise $30,000 by December 31, so we can continue covering what matters most to you. If New Times matters to you, please take action and contribute today, so when news happens, our reporters can be there.