Logo
DiS Needs You: Save our site »
  • Logo_home2
  • Records
  • In Depth
  • In Photos
  • Blog
  • Podcast
  • Search
  • Community
  • Records
  • In Depth
  • Blog
  • Community

THIS SITE HAS BEEN ARCHIVED AND CLOSED.

Please join the conversation over on our new forums »

If you really want to read this, try using The Internet Archive.

Kid Canaveral

Faulty Inner Dialogue

Label: Lost Map Release Date: 29/07/2016

103446
Mangham by Matt Langham July 25th, 2016

Something seems amiss as Faulty Inner Dialogue, the third record from Kid Canaveral, starts up. The starkness of the misfiring electronic opening to ‘Gun Fhaireachadain’ is such that it’s easy to think the mp3 is corrupt or the CD is skipping. It’s not until David MacGregor’s warm Scots burr cuts in that the track clambers to its feet, only to summarily knock itself over again.

“And I don’t see the fireworks that you’re seeing” he confesses as the song - a meditation on sleepwalking into a relationship before coming to - flowers into a beautiful mix of plangent guitars and a fusillade of drums, the contrast between the electronic and traditional underscoring the schism of miscommunication.

'Fhaireachadain' is a Gaelic word meaning the act of awakening. It’s fitting for the song, but also for the record, which is a potent musical statement from a band hitherto known for pleasingly unpretentious, pogoing power pop. Now a five piece, with new member Michael Craig handling the digital glitch, they have leapt into sparkling new territory.

It’s yielded one of indie rock’s songs of the year. Bitingly funny and scintillatingly smart, ‘First We Take Dumbarton’ does what few songs can: distils our contemporary culture - and woeful lack thereof - into four minutes of pulsating, palm-muted thrum and scree. Continuing a headstrong, very Scottish, freewheeling tradition, it shows the paranoid, pointless, parlous state we’re in while still managing to be uplifting. The full lyric could be reproduced here, but there’s just not the space.



The antidote to this blasting manifesto elsewhere is ‘From Your Bright Room’, handling the topic of the refugee crisis in Europe with admirable equanimity, neither sliding into preachiness nor mawkishness. It’s flat-out gorgeous, with MacGregor’s keening falsetto doing the emotional heavy lifting as pneumatic, fizzing drums act as a portentous reminder of the crisis at hand.

…Dialogue, however, is a reflective rather than political album. Its staying power comes from an easy interplay of writing, the band’s ace up the sleeve being their twin team of MacGregor and Kate Lazda. While darkened headspaces are explored – MacGregor’s “Pale White Flower” vulnerably voices obsessional mental health problems (“I don’t need to feel better than well / I only want to feel well”) - Lazda’s ‘Callous Parting Gift’ and ‘Listen to Me’ cast light to the shade, their concerns – strange dreams, relocating to a new city - more commonplace. ‘Tragic Satellite’, about jettisoning a poisonous relationship, is even an old-style indie-pop romp, but never feels like an appeasement. The approach makes what could be an oblique record perfectly balanced.

Subtle musical details throughout make the difference. Gentle rivulets of ideas audibly pool, grow and resolve, meaning Dialogue is a thoughtful, evocative delight that never feels cluttered. There’s zero reliance on flashiness. No posturing thrust. Clipped, repetitive guitar lines, married to the odd blast of cathartic noise, colour the songs, offsetting electronics beautifully - far better than any number of widdly solos or monitor-mounting showmanship.

The two instrumentals - ‘Ten Milligrams’ and ‘Twenty Milligrams’ - are hazy biospheres. Their snatches of birdsong, narcoleptic tom rolls and backwards samples could happily sit on Yo La Tengo’s classic I Can Hear The Heart Beating As One. ‘Lifelong Crisis of Confidence’ - including the lyrical gem “All the world is a stage and you’re puking in the green room” - has insistent harmonics, mocking strings and disembodied backing vocals to delineate its narrator’s struggles. ‘Lives Never Lived’, another contender for indie-rock song of the year, sounds like fellow Scottish stalwarts The Twilight Sad given the levity of a woodblock, which clonks along happily in the background oblivious to the torment of the lyric.

The tension of the record’s title comes in the difficulty that unflinching self-reflection naturally entails. Thematically this is sometimes a brittle and febrile record, but its unfettered joy is in how troubles are mediated musically, even if they aren’t ever fully resolved; life is tough, but there’s a beautiful solace to be found in sound, and really that’s the point of the whole enterprise. In facing its demons, and embracing life’s trivial struggles, this record has something for all.

Kid Canaveral’s previous album, the effervescent Now That You Are a Dancer, was longlisted for 2014 Scottish Album of the Year. Now making alt-pop that balances breeziness with gravitas, and established tropes with progression and purpose, there’s every chance Faulty Inner Dialogue will go one better.

ALBUM STREAM

![103446](http://dis.resized.images.s3.amazonaws.com/540x310/103446.jpeg)
  • 8
    Matt Langham's Score
Log-in to rate this record out of 10
Share on
   
Love DiS? Become a Patron of the site here »


LATEST


  • Why Music Journalism Matters in 2024


  • Drowned in Sound is back!


  • Drowned in Sound's 21 Favourite Albums of the Year: 2020


  • Drowned in Sound to return as a weekly newsletter


  • Lykke Li's Sadness Is A Blessing


  • Glastonbury 2019 preview playlist + ten alternative must sees



Left-arrow

Blood Orange

Freetown Sound

Mobback
103445
103452

Trim

1-800 Dinosaur Presents Trim

Mobforward
Right-arrow


LATEST

    news


    Why Music Journalism Matters in 2024

  • 106145
  • news


    Drowned in Sound is back!

  • 106143

    news


    Drowned in Sound's 21 Favourite Albums of the Y...

  • 106141
  • news


    Drowned in Sound to return as a weekly newsletter

  • 106139

    Playlist


    Lykke Li's Sadness Is A Blessing

  • 106138
  • Festival Preview


    Glastonbury 2019 preview playlist + ten alterna...

  • 106137

    Interview


    A Different Kind Of Weird: dEUS on The Ideal Crash

  • 106136
  • Festival Review


    Way Out East: DiS Does Sharpe Festival 2019

  • 106135
MORE


    news


    The Neptune Music Prize 2016 - Vote Now

  • 103918
  • Takeover


    The Winner Takes It All

  • 50972

    Takeover


    10 Things To Not Expect Your Record Producer To...

  • 93724
  • review


    The Mars Volta - Deloused In The Comatorium

  • 4317

    review


    Sonic Youth - Nurse

  • 6044
  • feature


    New Emo Goth Danger? My Chemical Romance confro...

  • 89578

    feature


    DiS meets Justice

  • 27270
  • news


    Our Independent music filled alternative to New...

  • 104374
MORE

Drowned in Sound
  • DROWNED IN SOUND
  • HOME
  • SITE MAP
  • NEWS
  • IN DEPTH
  • IN PHOTOS
  • RECORDS
  • RECOMMENDED RECORDS
  • ALBUMS OF THE YEAR
  • FESTIVAL COVERAGE
  • COMMUNITY
  • MUSIC FORUM
  • SOCIAL BOARD
  • REPORT ERRORS
  • CONTACT US
  • JOIN OUR MAILING LIST
  • FOLLOW DiS
  • GOOGLE+
  • FACEBOOK
  • TWITTER
  • SHUFFLER
  • TUMBLR
  • YOUTUBE
  • RSS FEED
  • RSS EMAIL SUBSCRIBE
  • MISC
  • TERM OF USE
  • PRIVACY
  • ADVERTISING
  • OUR WIKIPEDIA
© 2000-2025 DROWNED IN SOUND