Wednesday, September 12, 2007

Review: Mars Hill - Fate Chance Luck Dance


Label: Sandbar Music

Released: May 2006

According to Mars Hill's Myspace page, they are "one of the most original and finest bands of the 21st century" and they are "genre-defying." The former is beyond a stretch. No offense, but they aren't even close. The latter, however, is pretty accurate.

The list of genres touched significantly by Mars Hill is longer than most bands' list of even their most remote influences. Over the course of the album, they hit jazz (of the good and bad variety), hip-hop, Spanish, cabaret, reggae, dance, soul and, of course, rock. Among those who try to bring in disparate influences, few bands can take a list that long and maintain their own sound throughout. Careful arrangements manage to make this album homogeneous, but the actual songwriting and performance lack life as if the experiment couldn't quite be brought to full fruition. To be fair though, the lounge angle is a part of their shtick and adding more personality to the songs may have compromised that.

Their talent as players is generally pretty evident, particularly in the rhythm section that really drives the album to the extent that it is driven. The vocals range from laid-back, spoken style, reminiscent of Damon Albarn's work in Gorillaz, to well-cadenced hip-hop to an ethereal female soprano usually appearing in a backup role. Keys, guitar and horns act more as accents. The production doesn't keep the elements separate, but also fails to fill out the sound. They're really not far off target; they just fall a little short of what could have been.

There are thousands of cover bands out there that can morph their sound into any genre on command, but there are not nearly so many that can incorporate all of those genres into a single sound. While Mars Hill doesn't quite nail everything, they do come pretty close, so close in fact that they may be poised for an outstanding follow-up to this good, but not great, album. It's not essential, but it's worth a listen if you're looking for a band that's going in a new direction and doing an admirable if imperfect job rather than making a shambles of it.

Rating: 6/10

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4 Comments:

Blogger taotechuck said...

Your review pretty much reflects my thoughts about Mars Hill. They genre-hop without sounding like they're genre-hopping, which is not an easy accomplishment. Unfortunately, their songs never really catch my attention. I was reminded of Brazzaville more than once, but only in a "this is what Brazzaville would sound like if they weren't very interesting" kind of way.

If they're going to include lyrics in future releases, they need to hire a proofreader. There are commonplace mistakes ("your so perfect"), misspellings of ignorance ("fassad"), and erroneous pop-culture references ("Sisckel and Ebert").

11:52 AM  
Blogger Unknown said...

Hey Bob -this is Devin from Mars Hill. Thank you for the review. I am from Maryland as well. The "finest band of the 21st ...." was obviously tongue and cheek as so many bands today (and reviewers) do take themselves a lil' too seriously. Not a fan of the over-sell or hype myself. Next time I visit I will look you up. Good review.
peace
Devin

8:19 PM  
Blogger bob_vinyl said...

Devin - I'm glad to hear it was tongue-in-cheek. Sometimes it's so hard to tell. I'm anxious to hear what you have coming next.

11:16 AM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Hey Bob- this is Devin from Mars Hill. We are playing a friend's birthday at the end of May in Maryland. Was wondering if you could help us narrow down a suitable venue for a show-
thanks
Devin
dcasario@hotmail.com

8:36 PM  

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