Plume Giant’s debut LP, released yesterday and available on iTunes and Bandcamp,
is an emblem of both musical coalescence and personal growth.
The mellifluous trio, made up of Eliza Bagg
SM ’12 (violin, vocals, harmonium), Nolan Green ES ’12 (guitar, vocals, harmonium) and Oliver Hill BC ’12 (viola, guitar, vocals), continues to excel at
everything that made their “Plume Giant EP” unique yet recognizably
excellent.However, the new LP, “Callithump”
also experiments successfully with different types of songs while still
developing and expressing a signature sound.
By Brenda Wirth
“Callithump” also makes impressive use of
the multiple available articulations on its instruments — violin, viola, guitar,
harmonium, tamborine or the occasional horn. In “B-Side Baby” alone, for
example, the violin and viola play strong chordal elements, the main melodic
lines, secondary melodic fills and echoes, and plucked accents and
articulations. The voices themselves are rhythmic instruments, especially
effective when they enter at different times and trade back and forth.
Some songs recall tracks for the first EP. The
bleusy viola lines of “Kensico Dam” bring to mind “Black Cat,” and “Wait it Out”
falls somewhere between “Fool Hall” and “All of it Now.” But these songs, like
the rest of the album, add something unique with a few surprises along the way.
An early performance of "Wait it Out." NB how much slower it is.
“Wait it Out,” a single released in July, uses
a steady, rhythmic grove with a coherent bassline to build and then maintain
the energy throughout the song. Playful fiddled tunes in between vocals revive
a celebrated technique of “Fool Hall,” while the lively buildup to a strong chord
that signals the chorus adds an even greater drive that carries the listener
eagerly through the song. The song’s light nature questions the future without
agonizing over it, the lyrics refreshingly real without becoming overdramatic. This
sets a tone for the entire album. The lyrics on “Callithump”, which strike a
balance of playful and emotional, often give the listener a sense of what the
song is about, without making it obvious.
While in some songs traditional
verse-chorus-bridge-outro (with appropriate repetitions) patterns can be
discerned, the album’s compositional structure does not constrict itself to a
template. Each song’s structure is whatever best suits the story it tells or
the musical fabric it weaves.
Plume Giant begins to reach into other styles
and makes them its own. Oliver
explained that the first half of the LP is made up of more “deftly composed”
songs of different American styles, whereas the second half “opens up and
mellows out.”
In “We Got it Made,” a happy-go-lucky number
that adds some jazzy elements — with horn and harmonium to boot — inserts some
of Plume Giant’s signature vocal harmonies to add a unique touch to an
otherwise simpler, carefree song. “Birthday” begins with more ofDido feel that grows from an Eliza solo
to a fuller Plume Giant sound. “Before the Sun” sounds more country before the
harmonies and fiddle lines (thankfully) kick in.
The group’s ability to harmonize has been a
consistent strength, and “Callithump” makes ample use of sustained chords,
suspensions and extended ternary harmonies (mmmm add six chords). For dramatic
effect, the instruments cut out to highlight the three voices on certain
chords.
Consistent with the trio’s down-to-earth
demeanour, “Callithump” doesn’t shy away from throwing in some quirky treats. “Old
Joe the Crow,” a lighthearted tale of a crow that incorporates a lot of onomatopoetic
“caw caws” and “tweedle deets,” exemplifies this theme. Spinning off their
fun-seeking souls, Plume Giant has allowed performances of this track to inform
the finished product. After introducing Joe’s wife, Janette, the singers randomly
pipe up “Janette!” During a particularly dramatic solo of the group’s soprano
belting out a low melody line about Joe (a fantastic example of Plume members stretching
themselves in new ways), the backup shouts “Sing it, Eliza!.” Before the final
chorus of extended crow sounds, Nolan chimes in a “Whoooooooo!!!” The song culminates in a coda of cawing.
The unexpected keeps the record fresh. A
break in an anticipated moment (just before beat two) of “We’ve Got it Made” or
a Charlie Parkeresque instrumental flare that is intangible and everywhere for the
bridge of “November,” grabs the listener’s attention as if it were in danger of
slipping. (It isn’t.)
Plume Giant used a variety of drummers in
addition to Yalies Timothy Huntington Ulysses Gladding aka THUG SY ’14 on euphonium,
Matt Griffith TC ’14 on clarinet and Jacob Paul SM ’13 on trumpet to round out the
instrumental sections. Longer, more involved instrumental bridges could be an
interesting direction for future Plume Giant numbers.
The band used kickstarter to raise ten
grand in October for the album and for a few music videos, coming soon, and the
members worked with a New York freelance production engineer to coproduce the
record. Overall, production came out clean and professional with one or two minor
snags.
In “Back Porch,” for instance, a short song
towards the end of the LP about carefree, sexual exstasy, the an incoherent outro
leaves the listener a bit frustrated and confused. The use of harmonium
throughout the number is a strength of the song, but when it enters again at
the end after an instrumental section has already tapered off and faded, the
listener is jolted by a clunky line that starts louder than the previous fade but
also dies off. The song would have benefited from a smoother transition and
fade out, or a different compositional choice entirely. By contrast, the
distorted rock-style intro to the song was very well done, a not-so-obvious
decision for a folk song intro that fit well and was carefully executed.
The production expertise that comes with
multiple albums will happen for Plume Giant, an ensemble that, during its time
at Yale and after graduation, has come into its own, asserted its own musical
flavour and continued to stretch its own limits. The trio’s spirit shines
through in “November,” the emotional apex of the album that recalls the
intensity and concentration of “Tuesday,” from the EP.
And while Plume Giant would be hardpressd
to duplicate Tuesday’s soft yet dramatic, harmonic buildup in its wordless
chorus, the slower buildup throughout the entire song of “November,” the
delicacy of its vocal textures, and the complexity of the emotions they portray
are unparalleled.
It’s as if the song is teetering on the edge
of a curved blade and too much or too little at the wrong moment would cause
the entire thing to fall apart. “November” starts with Eliza’s voice and light
instrumental backing, just to emphasize certain certain vocal motions and to
keep the song from stagnating. Then, just as timidly, Eliza is joined by the
others and the experience begins to slowly build. By “how your breath hung in
the air,” most of the listener’s breaths will be hanging as well.
Halfway through the track, as the verse
repeats again, it starts to pick up more with “I remember, I remember”
compelling the group to accept the memory and tell the story, even if in
metaphors. The song ends with the ominous line, “How sad to lose something in
the snow,” followed by a chilling augmented chord and a winding down that just barely
releases the moment.
Music and lyrics compliment each other
harmoniously as they share and shift the spotlight onto each other, just as
Eliza, Nolan and Oliver revel in a shared musical energy that passes among them
while never truly leaving any individual.
Welcome back. And welcome back to an opportunity to be in a YMS music video! Plume Giant is shooting one today starting at 11 a.m. and going until around 6 p.m. (earlier if you guys are good dancers who get moves quickly?) Meet at Phelps Gate to walk over to the site in Wooster Square.
According to an e-mail from Oliver, this will be a "decked out Busby Berkeley type production with trombones coming out of car doors and sgt pepper costumes."
Wikipedia
There will be pizza and champaign. The YPMB will be featured. So much delicious.
Wear clothes along these lines: marching band, americana, sgt pepper, ziggy stardust.
Plume Giant
Mmmhmmmm?
If you're not getting back in time but are free Monday,Plume Giant is also looking for a group of about ten people for a smaller, rag-tag "featured" band from 10–4 tomorrow. Contact them for details.
Your Underbrook hosts are taking the stage tonight.
If you’re reading this, then you clearly value music on campus (or maybe you just think I’m cute and funny…or maybe I forced you to), so going to this show should be a matter of principle — of respect for the three individuals who have given you something to do with your Saturday night that enriches your musical side.
Principles aside you are clearly going to this show for its content as well.
Expect to hear your old favorite and plenty of new songs from the new album Nolan says is about halfway finished.
You already know that Plume Giantis amazing. So I don’t need to tell you how their well-crafted three-part vocal harmonies sustain and release tension so that you can almost taste the dissonances, how the high energy fiddle solos and well-grounded guitar parts move the songs effortlessly along, or how this campus loves Eliza, Nolan and Oliver as musicians, as patrons of the arts, and as people.
So I’m going to talk about Carline Smith and the Good Night Sleeps now.
This group is a lot of fun to listen to and a tasteful example of genre mixing. I’m not certain how their electronic and new wave aspects will translate to Underbrook’s setting, but the show should bring out their folkier elements. It’s clean, fun music that will keep you interested.
Bands go on at 8 in Saybrook entryway H. Don’t miss a second.
-This is super confusing because when we’re in the same room and one of us gets a text the other always thinks she has a text too and checks her phone awkwardly.
-It’s really just me who’s checking awkwardly because Alyssa is more popular than I am and is always getting texts.
-Alyssa actually changed her ring BECAUSE OF ME.
-Alyssa and I are fans of the greeting “Oh hey!” for each other. (I’ve never quite figured out how this happened, but I’m guessing it’s her fault.)
We were at Six Flags eating lunch (err fries) at Johnny Rockets, and I got up to take a few photos of our goofy friends and left my phone on the table. I got back, sat down, and I get a text message. FROM MYSELF. My phone beeped and the text symbol said “Zoe Gorman.”
I picked up the phone, and the message said, “OH HEY!”
Then Alyssa gave me back my actual phone.
I was hysterical. Like crying I was laughing so hard.
Alyssa innocently contemplating her straw
And I was thinking aren’t I so lucky that I get to stay on campus this week and listen to Salivating Eyes and hang with my Yale friends who prank me. You’re probably not as lucky as I am and are already off doing cool things outside of the Have.
But YMS doesn’t have to end with your departure from campus. There are some EPs coming out this summer (when Yalies have time to work on them) that I’m really excited about and will be reviewing as they’re released.
And there might be some other, more informal posts too, but I’m going to keep those secret for now.
Hopefully you’ve all downloaded Blue Noise by now, or picked up a hard copy at Spring Fling, so you’ll have something to listen to this summer before the EPs come out.
Speaking of which, Spring Fling was awesome!
You might not remember it for one reason or another…
But all three student bands exceeded expectations. So I’m going to tell you about each of them while giving out “awards,” starting with Sister Helen.
My expectations for Sister Helen, who opened Spring Fling, were prettttty loooowwww. I didn’t enjoy them at all at Battle of the Bands. When they were doing their sound check (and stalling a bit) I was watching them alone, and I was thinking wow, this is sad; I’m the only one here, and I don’t particularly want to be. But they really stepped it up, and after a minute or so of jamming the gates of Old Campus began seeing some traffic.
Sister Helen brought a lot of energy while tightening their performance a bit. Even though the lyrics are still repetitive and honestly quite creepy (and pitch isn’t really important to most of the vocal parts), I can appreciate that each of the musicians, especially the guitarist Chris Krasnow, is talented. Frontman Nathan Campbell ES ’14 continued to pump up the crowd by jumping around on stage like a madman, but he flailed less and didn’t strip.
I talked to Nathan afterward and he said he didn’t strip because I said in another post I didn’t want to see it. So to all the girls who wanted to see Nathan strip, I apologize; it’s my fault.
Sorry, girls.
Award time!
The Most Stoic in the Face of Technical Difficulties award
First place: guitarist guy in Sister Helen(Krasnow)
Honourable mention: Nathan Campbell, frontman and only Yalie in Sister Helen
Both these musicians had issues with their equipment during the show and didn’t falter at all. The guitarist’s strap came off SEVERAL times during the performance while he was soloing. Once Nathan went over and fixed it. Teamwork! The other time, one of the stage managers fixed it as the guitarist was crouching down and soloing.
If you don’t believe me here’s a vid.
WHOAH HOLD THE PHONE (not you, Alyssa. hands off). I’m sitting in Blue State writing this blog post and a group comes on with three part vocal harmony and violins and guitar and I’m like, I SWEAR that’s Eliza singing, this is so Plume Giant. Who else sounds like this? I didn’t recognize the song, and honestly I don’t think the Blue State people’s Pandora plays YMS bands, so I was like who is this professional group that sounds exactly like Plume Giant!? I’m tight with the Blue State people (because I practically live here), so I ask them what the band is, and Pat is like “Oh, that was Plume Giant. Yeah, my band Brown Bird plays with them a lot.” Yep. Blue State just played “All of it Now” from the Plume Giant EP. (which I obviously need to be more familiar with, so I’m listening to it now on my ITunes). Sweeeeet.
Blue State Coffee
Ok, now that I’ve sufficiently discussed Plume Giantin a post that has nothing to do with them…. Back to Sister Helen. Major props for dealing so well with your strap falling off and keeping the show going, guitarist dude!
Nathan gets second place because his mic cord got wrapped up in the make stand during the song where he keeps talking about my friend Gonzo(who only showed up for Gets the Girl despite the fact that Sister Helen seems to have dedicated a song to her.) He managed to unwrap it during breath breaks. Nice! He doesn’t get first place though, because the fact his mic cord was wrapped up was totally his fault in the first place. Nathan is just too crazy for normal equipment to handle.
Check out Nathan singing about Gonzo. (Disclaimer: Sister Helen and Gonzo don’t actually know each other, and I’m not sure what the song is actually about.)
"Appropriately Named Gonzo"
I really like that Sister Helen tries to make their bass parts interesting and complex. This adds a lot to the songs rhythmically and helps the group maintain its musical energy. Usually this works well for them, but sometimes it comes at the cost of losing the grounding aspect of bass for their songs, and since the guitarist plays awesome solos and rarely chords, it’s important to watch this.
Overall they were about three times better than I thought they’d be. Listening to them wasn’t actually painful. Fantastic.
Gets the Girlwas even better. A lot better.
Although they do a lot of slow songs well, I really liked the faster songs, especially in this setting, and I wish they’d play more. I always enjoy listening to Gets the Girl, but I find it hard to remember their songs afterward. Adding some more high energy numbers with catchy riffs would help to boost the memorability factor, and I am confident that Gets the Girl will not let this interfere with the quality of their orchestration.
A slow song, "Dreams in Green" that was great.
"The Lights," one of Gets the Girls faster songs and my personal fav.
Last time Gets the Girl packed the Battle of the Bands stage with a string section (umm Plume Giant) and a trumpet in addition to their five usual members. Fire hazard.
The Spring Flingstage was a lot bigger, so this wasn’t a problem. But it did mean that the trumpet and string section was really far away from the keyboard and the rest of the band. It was as if the guest musicians had their own little posse clustered in one corner and the core Gets the Girl band was in front and to the right.
Hi posse.
I’m sure there’s a way to solve this stage presence problem (perhaps with a staggered formation), but I haven’t quite figured it out.
Despite the positioning issues, Gets the Girl still looked good on stage. They were easily the best dressed band, which brings us to the 1st annual Spring Fling fashion awards. Omg. No she didn’t.
Best Outfit goes to Nathan Prillaman JE '13 of Gets the Girl.
Here’s a man who’s not afraid of the power of primary colours. He wears a bright red, classic t-shirt, bright blue jeans, and brown loafers. The All-American (if not so capitalist) man. To add a touch of originality, Nathan also sports a flashy pair of green shades. I also love that his guitar is purple and pink and that his strap is black with white sillouettes all over it. Colourful yet artsy. He was definitely noticed at Spring Fling. And not just for his behind the head guitar solo.
Reminds me of Hawaii Five-O...
Most Elegant: Eliza Bagg SM '12. (Of the Plume Posse.)
Duh.
This opera singer/violinist always wears dresses. Props. I’m a fan of that deep blue that brings out her intense yet reserved (musical) personality.
Best Music Model Pose: John Brandon MUS ’09
Sexy stuff
Dreamiest gaze: Ellis Ludwig-Leone TC '11
Outfit I’d most like to wear.
Clearly.
Back to the music.
Jamestown blew me away. All of the songs they played were excellent and super catchy. I can't wait for the EP. One leg-up that Jamestown has over Gets the Girl is that while they incorporate a lot of instrumentalists, their songs are simple enough that you're always left humming them and wanting to hear more.
Will Moritz sparkles
As soon as they opened with "Superhero," which they didn't play at BATB but I mentioned I wanted to hear in my preview, I knew this was going to be the best 20 minutes of finals week.
Jamestown saw similar staging issues as Gets the Girl, but they were less pronounced because Jamestowndidn't have an entire string section to make a corner cluster and spread everyone out throughout the big stage about equidistantly. I'd like to see the drummer brought forward in this setting, which would both cut down on space between musicians and give him more (well-deserved) play.
The fact that the keyboard was really far from the trumpet, however, did not always deteriorate from the musical experience. In "For You My Dear" Jamestown trades keyboard and trumpet solos. The effect was a rush of sound coming from stage left and then stage right, and then stage left — almost indicative of a surround-sound system.
"For you my dear"
Jamestownwas my Spring Fling highlight. No lie.
Time for the music awards. Most of these involve Jamestown, surprisingly.
Spring FlingMVP: Will Hutchison ES '12 (to express his legit MVP status I'm going to colour his name for the rest of this post)
It's hard to pick one musician asMVP, espcially for groups in which each member is an integral part of the team. But Will Hutchison stood out to me for consistently carryingJamestown through its set and adding precise yet enthusiastic fills. If the catcalls from the audience are any indication (they aren't) of Will's excellence, the people next to me were screaming "Yeah, Will Hutchison!" and "The drummer's sexy!" throughout. The stickbanger made ample use of his kit's variety of symbols. Without him,Jamestown would be a different group.
People stick there heads out windows to hear Will's fury
Will finally get to use the toms in "Troubled Child"
Most consistently awesome soloing: Jacab Paul SM '13, trumpet in Jamestown
He didn't hit every note perfectly, but 90% of them were sharp, clear and crisp. The way trumpets are supposed to sound. It also helps that Jacob gets all the good parts in Jamestown songs.
Honorable mentions: Will Morritz TC '12 (especially in "Indigo") and Chris Krasnow
Raddest Solo: Nathan Prillaman. Hard to argue with the guitar behind the head solo.
Honourable mention: Keys of JamestownMark Sonneblick MS '12 in "For you my dear"
Most awkward stage presence: Jamestownbackup singers Brenden Ternus TC '12 and Emma Barasch PC '11.
Please give this poor duo something to do. Give them a tamborine or something. When they're not singing, they just look like bouncing munchkins —although this might not be a bad thing...
Most ridiculous number: “Weekend”
Did he just seriously photograph the audience???
This song is so much ridiculous. Notice the full 360 trumpet pirouette and the fact that the munchkins seem to be swimming and that the bassist and drummer seem to be the only sane ones on stage. Jamestown explosion. I was singing this to myself throughout reading week, but instead of the "weekend," it was more like the entire reading period. Oh oh oh oh I don't know. Where did the whole week go?
Have a great summer everyone, and don't be strangers.