Holy Motors
Horse
Wharf Cat
โHold your horses, cowboy, put your pickup in reverse,โ drawls Holy Motors vocalist Eliann Tulve on โCountry Church.โ Tulve makes a conscious effort to enunciate on the Estonian rock bandโs second album, Horse. The result is an immediacy similar to when critics had to stop calling R.E.M.โs Michael Stipe โMumblesโ in the late 1980s.ย
Horse is akin to a Holy Motors hootenanny, markedly more confident and forward-facing than their debut. This time around, instead of directly appropriating Americana and American western film soundtracks, the guitars achieve cinematic grandeur by simply being evocative. The best example of this is their finest song to date, โEndless Night.โ Hitting all the frequencies, this song alone earns the accolades lauding guitarists Lauri Raus and Gert Gutmann. At once elegiac and propulsive, โEndless Nightโ ends too soon. Speaking of frequencies, youโll know if your bass EQ is too high from the low-end flicker of doom in โMidnight Cowboy,โ sounding like Holy Motors playing at a prom where everyone forgot to show up.
That psychedelic spaghetti western template fuels intriguing dramatic turns in both โTroubleโ and โMatador,โ which has a false ending that pre-empts a searing guitar outro, and holy Epiphones, is it breathtaking. Although โRoad Starsโ is effective as an experimental, mid-album palate cleanser, the male voice unexpectedly joining Tulveโs is jarring; itโs just not a good duet. โLife Valley (So Many Miles Away),โ a major-key instrumental with wordless vocals, closes the album on a high note. Itโs the most โshoegazeโ of anything on Horse, and with some different effects pedals, this song would sound right at home on Rideโs Nowhere. Readily compared to Mazzy Star, Lana Del Rey, and Cowboy Junkies, with Horse, Holy Motors have made a gorgeous, stately record that puts miles between them and their reference points.
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SPILL ALBUM REVIEW: HOLY MOTORS – HORSE
Charles T. Stokes