23 Nov 2024
UsernamePassword

Remember Me? | Join | Recover
Click here to sign in via social networking

Merk - Album Review: Infinite Youth

13 Apr 2021 // A review by Callum Wagstaff

Merk has been up and running since 2016, collecting a few accolades and getting some attention in that time. He is a Red Bull Music Academy alumni and winner of the Auckland Live Best Independent Debut award in 2017. Merk's sound has been described as bedroom pop, psych-pop, and home-spun alternative pop. Infinite Youth is his second full length album after 2016's Swordfish.

Infinite Youth is steeped in a niceness that makes it a great soundtrack for feeling like you're in a bohemian slice of life romantic movie. It plays like a meet-cute scene with a hint of foreshadowing that somebody is going to get cancer or have their memories wiped.

The whole album revolves around themes of youth and transition, with a pervasive undercurrent that feels like apocalyptic existentialism coming from the next room. It's never quite all the way into optimistic acceptance, but decorates begrudging resignation with kooky sounds. It has a  similar endearing quality to Pickle Darling's work.

GOD uses some percussive elements that remind me of Alt J, with vocal production reminiscent of acts like The Naked and Famous and MGMT.

Laps Around The Sun
does a clever representation of its subject by structuring itself as a repeating refrain that gets extra juices added on each lap. This song is a touchstone in the album. The line "everybody gets to have their fun when it's the weekend" sounds awkwardly strung together at first, but that eccentricity turns out to be genius when it sticks in your head for hours afterward.

Deep Dive's end is a great example of some of the warbly low-fi affectations that give Infinite Youth a warm and cosy energy that you could sit down by a fire and knit to. Happiness contains really interesting string section swells that are exaggerated with volume swells. Merk has dubbed this the "pocket symphony".

Final track Infinite Youth verges on the berm of revisionist synthwave in the direction of The Neverending Story more than Stranger Things. It has a slow tempo and palpable emotional space between beats and notes. It's a wind down in comparison to the rest of the album, but lists between dynamic swells within itself usually led by percussive elements.

Except then it isn't.

It has a second movement of sorts where it veers into a disco-esque refrain in which Merk chants "We are the infinite youth." There's some cool little string parts darting around the head space too, which as the album ends, reminds me that there's been heaps of cool, quirky and interesting ear candy scattered all over this release.

Infinite Youth has some great songs in it in a standalone capacity like the intriguing Laps Around the Sun.
As an active listening piece it can be a bit of a strain; the dynamic range stays well inside the pocket of bedroom pop. It's an ideal soundtrack to accompany creative activities with a tactile element like cooking or building small robots.

The particular type of attention those activities require means you're frequently noticing the interesting affectations Merk's
songs incorporate. Infinite Youth is a really clever and intimate affair just perfect for a rainy day in a bay window.

Rating: ( 4 / 5 )
 

Releases

Infinite Youth
Year: 2021
Type: Album
Swordfish
Year: 2017
Type: Album

Other Reviews By Callum Wagstaff

SD-2100 - Album Review: Not Bred to Feel the Fat
29 Oct 2024 // by Callum Wagstaff
Sam Densem, better known as SD-2100 (a brand of metal detector but that's not what he's named after), is aggressively prolific. By the time this review is published he's already released two more EP's and a compilation.
Read More...
Saurian - EP Review: Bled Dry
09 Sep 2024 // by Callum Wagstaff
From Dunedin, New Zealand comes Saurian, a four-piece hard rock band with a new EP called Bled Dry which came out Friday the 13th of September. The 5 song EP includes the band's latest 3 singles, Devil Among Men, Down at the Crown, and Park Bench.
Read More...
Moider Mother - Album Review: Miracle Healing Crusade
28 Apr 2024 // by Callum Wagstaff
"Take a pinch of Raincoats, add a tablespoon of early Swans, sauté in the first Stooges album and add half a brick. Put it in a sock.
Read More...
Swamp Rat Collective - EP Review: Flash Sneakers
16 Apr 2024 // by Callum Wagstaff
The Swamp Rat Collective is a dirty, matted tangle of influences from the guitar music of the era between the late 80's and early 2000's. The project is a collaboration between Paul Cowsill (rhythm and bass guitar) and Adam Gatt (lead guitar) that crosses the ocean, comprising parties from Auckland, New Zealand as well as London, UK.
Read More...
Daniel Ashcroft - Album Review: Chica De La Bum
05 Feb 2024 // by Callum Wagstaff
Daniel Ashcroft is a multi-instrumentalist, producer and composer based in Feilding.His musical goals are simple: He wants to play every instrument he possibly can, explore every genre and collaborate with as many singers as possible.
Read More...
Dub Asylum - EP Review: Time & Space EP
19 Nov 2023 // by Callum Wagstaff
Dub Asylum is the musical alias for Peter McLennan, former member of 90's reggae-thrash-punk-ska mutants the Hallelujah Picassos. Now working solo, Peter McLennan's Dub Asylum is a musical mash-up of dub reggae, hip-hop and funk.
Read More...
Bad Jelly Collective - EP Review: WESTBOUND&DOWN
10 Oct 2023 // by Callum Wagstaff
Bad Jelly Collective is the brainchild of 'Bad Jelly' Ben. Tucked away in his Huia road Home Studio in the Waitakere Ranges, Ben weaves his psychedelic soundscapes together with the creative forces of his team of musical mates.
Read More...
Album Review: Cautionary Tales
16 Aug 2023 // by Callum Wagstaff
Cautionary Tales is an alt-rock band based in Aotearoa, via Berlin and New York. It's an art-rock outfit built around the type of myths and legends where somebody gets screwed over for riding a scorpion or not tipping an old lady.
Read More...
View All Articles By Callum Wagstaff

NZ Top 10 Singles

  • APT.
    ROSÉ And Bruno Mars
  • DIE WITH A SMILE
    Lady Gaga And Bruno Mars
  • BIRDS OF A FEATHER
    Billie Eilish
  • TASTE
    Sabrina Carpenter
  • I LOVE YOU, I'M SORRY
    Gracie Abrams
  • ESPRESSO
    Sabrina Carpenter
  • SAILOR SONG
    Gigi Perez
  • LOSE CONTROL
    Teddy Swims
  • A BAR SONG (TIPSY)
    Shaboozey
  • GOOD LUCK, BABE!
    Chappell Roan
View the Full NZ Top 40...
muzic.net.nz Logo
100% New Zealand Music
All content on this website is copyright to muzic.net.nz and other respective rights holders. Redistribution of any material presented here without permission is prohibited.
Report a ProblemReport A Problem