Reviews

Review: The Clientele Create Classic Rock in the Present Tense

The Clientele/I Am Not There Anymore/Merge Records
Four Out of Five Stars

The Clientele have always been known as an imaginative ensemble, and with their new album, I Am Not There Anymore, they take that otherworldly ambiance to an even higher plateau. Singer, guitarist, and lyricistย Alasdair MacLeanย adopts a surreal sensibility, describing it as the feeling of not being real.โ€ A set of songs inspired by MacLeanโ€™s memories of the early summer in 1997, when his mother died, the music was first delayed by the pandemic but finally furthered by the bandโ€™s experimental ambitions. It then incorporated elements of post-bop jazz, contemporary classical, and electronic music, with MacLean then enhancing the results of the bandโ€™s studio recordings.ย 

MacLean further describes I Am Not There Anymoreย as the memory of childhood but at the same time the impossibility of truly remembering childhoodโ€ฆ or even knowing who or what you are, and while that certainly sounds somewhat oblique, the music is often catchy and compelling, as opposed to surreal and circumspect. Thatโ€™s not to say there arenโ€™t certain psychedelic elements swirling around in the mix. Songs such as the extended opener โ€œFables of the Silverlink,โ€ โ€œDying In May,โ€ โ€œBlue Over Blue,โ€ โ€œThe Village Is Always On Fire,โ€ โ€œChalk Flowers,โ€ and โ€œGarden Eye Mantraโ€ manage to be both affecting and elusive all at the same time, especially given the dense instrumental arrangements and the cerebral suggestion that creates an intriguing aural melange. A series of sweeping and swirling soundscapes enhanced by brass and strings, it could be considered the bandโ€™s most adventurous effort yet, a suite of sorts that fully reflects MacLeanโ€™s ambitious intents.ย 

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In certain ways, I Am Not There Anymore is a throwback to the prog precepts of the late โ€˜60s and early โ€˜70s โ€” a bit of Soft Machine, The Soft Boys, and Kevin Ayers all rolled into one. โ€œLady Grey,โ€ โ€œStems of Anise,โ€ โ€œI Dreamed of You, Maria,โ€ and โ€œClaireโ€™s Not Realโ€ย come across with poppier precepts, a sound thatโ€™s indicative of classic British rock at its most precious and postured. Itโ€™s all sweet and surreal, a continuation of the approach the band has taken since their initial inception just over 20 years ago. So too, itโ€™s odd at times, but thatโ€™s all part of the charm and challenge inherent in each of the Clienteleโ€™s offerings. Consider this an ideal example of exacting pop positioning thatโ€™s as strikingly sophisticated as it is uncommonly inventive.

Courtesy Pitch Perfect PR