Summer Obsessions: Foxygen's Latest Might Be the Best Album So Far This Year

Share on Nextdoor
Foxygen - Press Photo
Press Photo
Foxygen

I have an unusual music source. His name is Baron and he came to the United States in his late teens as a foreign exchange student from Germany. Although his homeland's biggest contribution to American music is probably when Nena floated to number two on the Billboard chart in 1983 with "99 Luftballoons" and its translated sibling "99 Red Balloons," Baron has tremendous taste in music. We were chatting about music one day, as we often do, and in his still-thick German accent Baron said to me: "You must check out Foxygen - I play it on repeat." Knowing he would never steer me toward beer festival style Oom-pah polkas or raucous heavy metal like Defeated Sanity or Heaven Shall Burn, for which his homeland is best known today, I took that recommendation and ran with it. Suffice to say: Baron, you have done it again.

Jonathan Rado and Sam France clearly depleted their skill in coming up with clever, pithy names when it created the duo's fantastic moniker, leaving us with the clunky We Are the 21st Century Ambassadors of Peace & Magic as the name of its second album. The music strongly belies the unwieldy title, playing like a 36 minute breath of fresh air, a beautiful album that, like grilled Chilean Seabass, could be best enjoyed outdoors on a summer evening with a crisp citrusy sauvignon blanc. Far too many varied styles and influences permeate 21st Century Ambassadors to fit Foxygen neatly in a box, but it can be most closely grouped into the psychedelic revival with bands like Tame Impala, MGMT and Pond.

Rado and France, a pair of 22 year-olds from Los Angeles, have clearly spent much of their limited time on Earth studying the musical styles of the late '60s and '70s, incorporating church-style organs, chimes, flute, clapping, piano, repetitive female accompaniment and even doo-wop into a masterful concoction where not only do no two songs sound alike, they hardly sound like they emanate from the same band. Many artists are similarly drawing from the staples of yesteryear, so what makes these chaps different is the way they practically occupy the era, going far beyond dropping the occasional reference -- they could just as easily have written these songs while sitting cross-legged around a hookah and complaining about the Nixon administration. Foxygen doesn't just evoke the easy themes of the time - peace, love and understanding, it delves deeper into the political and social mores of the era. Lyrics don't just obliquely mention "the war," but talk to "my grandma who lost her arms in the war," singing not just of the heavy drug use, but of "smoking pot on the subway." It is that level of detail that makes the band authentic, not just a couple of posers who once watched a Woodstock DVD.

Aside from the fact that he possesses actual musical talent and has no interest in winning a karaoke contest that wastes hundreds of millions of American hours, France would be a shoo-in for American Idol or The Voice, as even someone with a tin ear can easily point to several spot-on homages to the prominent singers of the era. On "No Destruction," he gives a Bob Dylan impression that four actors and an Oscar-winning actress couldn't match in the movie I'm Not There. If you close your eyes during "On Blue Mountain," you can practically see France doing a rooster walk and wagging his finger at the crowd while wearing 24-inch waist pants and somehow getting his words to pass through the world's biggest lips. The listener is even treated to a credible Elvis Presley impersonation in the title track.

In the album's highlight, "San Francisco," France takes us on a tour of the city where he many years ago (what, when he was 7?) "left his love." It plays like a late 1960s love-in jam, a mellow groove featuring the light sounds of bells, flutes and piano tucked underneath France's gentle falsetto. The chorus is a call and response dialogue between the former loves: "I left my love in San Francisco / That's OK, I was bored anyway / I left my love in the room / That's OK, I was born in L.A." Whether there is an actual human object of affection is not certain, as it may be just an ode to a city the Los Angeles natives obviously love, as they earlier reference it as the "door of consciousness." Either way, it is a gorgeous and unique song, one that begs for multiple consecutive listens.

It is nearly impossible to survive the long, hot slog of a Midwestern summer without taking a long road trip in search of preferable climes. Foxygen is an ideal front seat companion, whether you are alone or trying to drown out children who are somehow complaining despite having an arsenal of entertainment their parents could never have dreamed possible. As Baron recommended, just play it on repeat and score another one for German engineering.

Others favorites of 2013 so far:

Deerhunter - Monomania Parquet Courts - Light Up Gold The National - Trouble Will Find Me Kurt Vile - Wakin On a Pretty Daze My Bloody Valentine - mbv

You can (and should) follow Dave on Twitter @thegeeter

See Also: - The Top Ten Ways to Piss Off Your Bartender at a Music Venue - Ten Bands You Never Would Have Thought Used to Be Good - The Top 15 Things That Annoy the Crap Out of Your Local Sound Guy

Follow RFT Music on Twitter or Facebook. Follow RFT Music editor Daniel Hill on Twitter too, if you are into that sort of thing.

Scroll to read more Music News & Interviews articles (1)

Newsletters

Join Riverfront Times Newsletters

Subscribe now to get the latest news delivered right to your inbox.