Pop album review: ‘Chelsea Light Moving’
- Share via
Thurston Moore’s new band Chelsea Light Moving is named after the avant-garde composer Philip Glass’ pre-fame moving company, and that’s a pretty good metaphor for the band’s sound: high-minded musicians doing some dumb, brawny lifting.
The band’s self-titled debut comes after a gentler acoustic solo album and what appears to be a long hiatus for Sonic Youth (Moore is separating from his wife and band co-founder Kim Gordon). So it makes sense that his next move is this low-stakes, punky project whose album sounds like it was written in an afternoon — in both good and bad ways.
The music on Chelsea Light Moving is, at times, some of the most pointedly dissonant stuff Moore’s written — see the Siouxsie and the Banshees guitar squeals of “Burroughs,” or the sludge-metal of “Frank O’Hara Hit.” Other tracks are goofy fun, such as the baritone spoken-word monologue on “Mohawk” or the deconstructed hard-core spittle of “Lip.” None of it adds much to Moore’s legacy as a guitar innovator and post-punk aesthete, but you leave the record feeling as sweaty and beat as you would hauling a couch up to a sixth-floor walk-up.
Chelsea Light Moving
Self-titled
Matador
Two and a half stars
More to Read
The biggest entertainment stories
Get our big stories about Hollywood, film, television, music, arts, culture and more right in your inbox as soon as they publish.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.