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Cate Le Bon: Pompeii

Cate Le Bon: Pompeii

“Faced with a choice, do both,” Brian Eno once proffered. On Cate Le Bon’s apocalyptically titled but sky-reaching sixth album, the Welsh art-pop iconoclast orients her bemused songs by the compass of this oblique strategy. Le Bon collages the saxophones and bass grooves of Pompeii into a heady harmonic mix of psychedelia and pop, awe and bewilderment, amplifying both her criss-crossing inscrutability and the inexhaustible pleasures of clarity. These inquisitive songs feel, to borrow a word from one of her lyrics, “multidirectional.”

Now based in California’s Mojave Desert—a peculiar, austere, and immersive landscape, not unlike that of her songs—Le Bon has been making records for her entire adult life. But she likened the process of her last, 2019’s Reward, to writing a first album. She had stepped back from music for a year to learn the craft of building practical objects—chairs and tables, specifically—while making a daily practice of listening to David Bowie. The creation of Le Bon’s next album would not be so methodical. Recording Pompeii at the pandemic’s peak, she fluctuated between hope and dread: “You can’t help but wonder if this is the last thing you’re ever going to make,” she said of her “mental polarization” then. “You’re swinging between ‘Oh, fuck’ and ‘Fuck it.’” Nodding to the crumbling nature of life as we knew it, and perhaps to her own excavation of buried memories, she named her record after a civilization in ruins beneath lava and ash. But there is a hidden optimism here: “Every fear that I have/I send it to Pompeii,” goes the titular chorus, turning the fossilized Roman city at once into an evocation of the end times and an incinerator for doubt when there is nothing left to lose.

Pompeii exists in the vivid waking dreamscape of Low and Bowie’s other late-’70s adventures, at times imagining a reality where he glittered up the production of John Cale’s wry surrealism instead of Lou Reed. But Le Bon’s particular streak of shape-shifting absurdism has its own poised and introspective post-punk lawlessness. Like her rawer, more spontaneous band DRINKS, a collaboration with Tim Presley, Pompeii sounds like music we are listening in on, and when Le Bon sings, it is with all the mystery of late-afternoon light casting streaks and shadows on the wall. Pompeii is her poppiest album, and yet one might picture Le Bon devising the title while watching her psych forebears rock amid ruins in Pink Floyd: Live at Pompeii, a scene with uncanny resonance in 2020: an isolated amphitheater with no audience, no feedback, the air unsettled.

If the locked-in grooves propelling Pompeii’s otherworldly textures make these nine tracks feel like one, that’s in part because Le Bon wrote primarily on the bass, which sings across this record as anchor and harmonizer. The record’s silvery tone has a similar unifying effect, inspired, as it were, by a painting of Le Bon in the guise of a nun by Tim Presley. (The actual album cover is a photographic portrait replicating the painting, which Le Bon could not bear to commodify.) In interviews, Le Bon has described how she and co-producer Samur Khouja stared at the artwork’s striking color scheme (amber, olive, Yves Klein blue) to guide the assembly of their own synth pallet—how dualities of light and dark, hope and fear, exist, for Le Bon, on the canvas. To further illuminate the beguiling divinity of Presley’s piece, Le Bon has cited a Rebecca Solnit essay on Virginia Woolf that reads: “Most people are afraid of the dark… many adults fear, above all, the darkness that is the unknown, the unseeable, the obscure.” But Solnit is quick to clarify that this is the same darkness “in which love is made, in which things merge, change, become enchanted….” The spacious, improvisatory energy of Pompeii often contains the feeling of searching through this night. Its tone could be called the enchanted unknown.

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    wazup
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    “Faced with a choice, do both,” Brian Eno once proffered. On Cate Le Bon’s apocalyptically titled but sky-reaching sixth album, the Welsh art-pop icon
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