Radar Brothers - The Illuminated Garden reviews

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   Popmatters
Radar Brothers - The Illuminated Garden review“I’m a deer in your headlights”, singer Jim Putnam tells us as the start of this gauzy, languid record, “and I’m a bird in your gunsights.” It’s an appropriate beginning to a record rife with animal imagery—song titles include “For the Birds”, “Horses Warriors”, “Chickens”, and even “People”—and lyrics suggestive of self-doubt, bordering on self-loathing.


The Illuminated Garden is either the sixth record from Radar Brothers or their first, depending on your method of accounting: having released five previous records as Radar Bros, the band split, leaving Putnam to restock the rhythm section and carry on with new bassist Be Hussey and drummer Steve Treichel. Longtime fans had reason to wonder what this new incarnation would sound like.


The answer is frustrating. Album opener “Dear Headlights” sets the tone in many ways, with sweet harmonies and hushed lyrics delivered at a slow tempo; the song grows more affecting with repeated listens. But the followup, “Rainbow”, struggles to find a tune and fails, while “For the Birds” brings a dirgelike feel to its arrangement of acoustic guitar and calliope-like tootling, reinforced through the plaintive lyrics: “Take me out of this town / Throw me from the bridge / Gray steel girders dance with me / The fish below, they smile.” Despite its funereal qualities, the song gains momentum through layered vocals and swelling orchestration, and achieves a rare moment of transcendence. “Quarry” brings a slightly harder edge (but not too hard) and somewhat discordant tone to the guitars, while keeping the tempos unhurried and the mood introspective and vulnerable. “I want you, I need you”, we are told. “Right now my life’s on a cereal box.” Make of that what you will.


“Horses Warriors”, midway through the album, picks up the pace a little, thank God. The lyrics evoke an insular world populated with non sequiturs and mystery: “There, I see you’ve got your pachydermal diary”, Putnam sings early on, and, “But the horses and warriors are going to tear you apart, and take all you got / So you might as well sit down and watch the picture show.” To the band’s credit, these head-scratchers are delivered with a degree of conviction that saves them from absurdity. The lovely harmonies help, too, as does a galloping beat reminiscent of a band of runaway thoroughbreds....full text

   Mog
"I’m a deer in your headlights", singer Jim Putnam tells us as the start of this gauzy, languid record, "and I’m a bird in your gunsights." It’s an appropriate beginning to a record rife with animal imagery--song titles include "For the Birds", "Horses Warriors", "Chickens", and even "People"--and lyrics suggestive of self-doubt, bordering on self-loathing. The Illuminated Garden is either the sixth record from Radar Brothers or their first, depending on your method of accounting...full text

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