24 Nov 2024
UsernamePassword

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

Anecdata - Album Review: Obsolete

05 Jun 2024 // A review by Nicholas Clark

Anecdata is a one man band, Dan, who proves without a shadow of a doubt that a single person can be far more prolific than a band of many members. He has recorded nine albums and a number of singles, dabbling in various genres (grunge pop as well as new wave inspired rock) and done covers also including New Zealand classic Sierra Leone, originally by Coconut Rough, and two Beatles covers (I Am The Walrus, and Things We Said Today).

His most recent offering is Obsolete, which was written and recorded in just six weeks in January/February of this year. It tackles subjects such as artificial intelligence, the future of jobs with both humans and robots in the workplace, the economy and the world going to hell. The band name itself means “information or evidence that is based on personal experience or observation rather than systematic research or analysis” and this relates specifically to this album’s themes of future pondering. However, if you thought the music was going to be dark, you’d be surprised…

The album is upbeat, invigorating and colourful. The guitars are fuzzed out, delivering a wall of powerful sound while power-pop-punk style drums smash and crash through the songs with a playful energy. But it’s the keyboards that really take centre stage, even over the vocals, in many songs. Dan is obviously a fan of 1980’s new wave bands such as New Order, Talking Heads, Devo and Gary Numan. 80’s style synths buzz and purr throughout the tracks as a lead instrument, then murmur, coo and croon in the background while supporting the song. It gives the whole sonic texture of the album a futuristic taste (even if those sounds are, in fact, slightly retro and originate in the past). Set against these keyboards are Smashing Pumpkins style voicings, or power chord choices that wouldn’t be amiss on a Fu Manchu, Helmet or even a Weezer record. A New Zealand equivalent would be Good Shirt who combined these powerful guitar sounds with playful synth lines. The vocals are somewhat buried, but sometimes are vocoded, echoed or effected in some other way to draw attention to the lyrics (such as using a robot voice when discussing the topic of artificial intelligence). It all makes for an impressive, thick sound that largely shapes the whole album.

The album begins with an instrumental, Wake Up, Arabella!, which is really just an engine test for the musical outfit that is Anecdata. It’s got it all: the Devo keyboards, the Smashing Pumpkins fuzz, the fast energetic drumming hinting at what is to come.

Wake Up Feeling Shit, the ‘single’, features the keyboards front and centre, with harmonized vocals that dramatically change the song’s direction on the lines: ‘Doctor tells me to get a blood test’ or ‘the doctor tells me to take a new pill’ followed not only by a tasteful guitar solo, but a keyboard to boot.

Many songs on this album (such as Merging Universes and Failure) have the guitar fuzz on full, and also proving Dan is a fan of the Moog sound. There’s some real cleverness to be found here, with witty lyrics such Fake Job, ‘look at me now, working at a day job at night’ and other songs such as W*RK and Obsolete, which revolve around questioning the rapidly approaching revolution related to artificial intelligence, specifically in relation to the workplace.

While the sound of the record is upbeat, the lyrics are usually quite dark except for the occasional humorous track such as The Questions That Keep Me Up At Night (“If animals could talk would they be a friend or enemy?”) but even then, there seems to be an existential crisis right below the surface waiting to be explored.

Throughout the album, the same sound is often employed to great effect. Scablord (which positively explodes at 1.11 into perhaps the heaviest riff of the album bordering on stoner rock), and Obsolete features a Hammond organ sound, and Vultures includes a sudden stops/go rhythm that really draws attention to the tightness of the performances, however, the prominent sound does get just a little repetitive perhaps.

The World Can Go To Hell has a bit of a 90's vibe, or 2000’s Mid-West emo introduction, and has the delightful lyrics: ‘we might as well enjoy the final curtain’, which appears to be what Dan is doing here with his musical outfit perhaps.

Shadow War is another instrumental that officially closes the album, featuring the same fuzzed out bliss, with a prominent bass, and swirling synth leads.

We’re Doomed, the final, bonus track, features the same powerful sound but contains some of the darkest lyrics on the album: ‘What do you know, it was earth all along, what were we thinking, if we were at all’, followed later in the song by the refrain ‘time is running out, we’re doomed’, all the more challenging perhaps because it is delivered in an upbeat vocal style similar to The Cars. It seems like this is the intention often – almost as if the apocalypse will arrive, but with a pleasant smile/voice.

It’s a robust sounding record that demonstrates both the advantages and disadvantages of single person outfits. Dan is obviously a very talented musician, and you can’t argue with his output, but perhaps with others in the band different ideas may have been explored. As it is, it’s a slab of solid rock with one foot in a new-wave synth revival, slickly produced to a highly professional level.

One musician, surely, that will be hard to replace once the robot overlords arrive.

 

About Anecdata

Anecdata is one guy - me! Dan. I live in West Auckland, which isn't a surprising place to end up for someone born in Hawke's Bay that grew up in Hamilton.

It's essentially a home studio outlet for my songs, whether they're alternative rock (See 2022's Syzygy), electronic (2020's Battle Thru Time, release just two weeks before the first Covid lockdown), lo-fi indie (2022's Team of Just One), or a tribute to 1980's new wave (2021's double album Undelete).

2022 was a particularly productive year, with a few full-length records (including the retro electro-pop Escape From Mars, released under the Dharma Police moniker) a couple of one-off grunge-pop singles (House of Ghouls and the satirical/political Holidays in Hawaii) and a series of covers - including the Beatles' I Am the Walrus and Things We Said Today, and Kiwi classic Sierra Leone, originally by Coconut Rough.

Visit the muzic.net.nz Profile for Anecdata

Releases

Obsolete
Year: 2024
Type: Album
Aucklantis
Year: 2023
Type: Album
If I Was PM...
Year: 2023
Type: Album

Other Reviews By Nicholas Clark

DarkWater - Album Review: Turning Point
13 Nov 2024 // by Nicholas Clark
Turning Point is a complex, dynamic album that takes the listener on an intense ride. There are mysterious, fragile, powerful and gritty moments to discover on this ten-track offering that sounds both balanced and refined.
Read More...
Job Site - EP Review: The New Zealand Experience
15 Oct 2024 // by Nicholas Clark
Emerging from the Waikato, high energy punk band Job Site showcases their special blend of comedic music on their latest offering, the 4 track The New Zealand Experience EP. The band plays fast and heavy throughout the recording, with rhythms that range from oi-punk, thrash music and even a little 2000’s indie rock.
Read More...
Festival Review: Great Sounds Great Review 2 @ Wellington - 31/08/2024
03 Sep 2024 // by Nicholas Clark
Six iconic venues. Twenty eight acts.
Read More...
Voodoo Bloo - Album Review: Dead-end Rodeo
28 Aug 2024 // by Nicholas Clark
Rodeos, at least in this country, aren’t perceived as sport nowadays. If the term is used at all in New Zealand it usually refers to a metaphor for an intense struggle to survive or to conquer the unconquerable, if but for fleeting moment.
Read More...
Gig Review: Bad Schematics @ Moon, Wellington - 26/07/2024
27 Jul 2024 // by Nicholas Clark
Fresh from picking up numerous awards in the recent National Battle of the Bands competition, Bad Schematics have embarked on a North Island tour including Tauranga, Auckland and their hometown Palmerston North, to promote their newest album,C O L L I D E. Tonight, along with winners of the competition for this year, Adoneye, finalists Donal and The Bucks and last year’s second place winners, Dave and the Dirty Humans, Bad Schematics hit Wellington’s favourite underground alternative music venue and pizzeria, Moon.
Read More...
Gig Review: Floyd Marsden @ Valhalla, Wellington - 18/07/2024
19 Jul 2024 // by Nicholas Clark
Although technically a sad affair, (as it was to be final of Floyd Marsden’s string of local shows promoting her album The Disco Lizards), the atmosphere in Valhalla was uncharacteristically filled with retro vibes but the usual friendly faces. In support for this show was Adult Friends, spearheaded by vocalist/guitarist Jackson Kidd who was also the producer of The Disco Lizards.
Read More...
SuperMild - EP Review: SuperMild
11 Jun 2024 // by Nicholas Clark
SuperMild is a busy band playing lots of venues and entertaining crowds with their blend of reggae tinged psychedelic rock. Their debut, self-titled four song EP is out now, and it spans the many sounds the band can summon with just three members.
Read More...
Carb On Carb - Album Review: Take Time
16 May 2024 // by Nicholas Clark
Carb on Carb was a busy, touring band until the lockdowns of 2020 and 2021. While promoting their first two full length albums, For Ages and their self-titled debut, James Stuteley (drums / vocals) and Nicole Gaffney (guitar / vocals) toured as far as Japan and the US, as well as extensively throughout New Zealand.
Read More...
View All Articles By Nicholas Clark

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