New Terror Bird: Human Culture.

January 27, 2011, 5 comments

At No Fear Of Pop, we don’t have a category called “Zoned In” like the friendly folks over at the internet’s darkest zone. But if we had, and damn isn’t this a neat introduction, Terror Bird‘s new LP would clearly be featured on it, cause frankly, Human Culture is my favorite record in the world right now.

After a few tapes on Night People and Scotch Tapes, and an acclaimed 7 inch on Atelier Ciseaux and La Station Radar, the proper debut full-length of this Vancouver group has been long awaited and highly anticipated. The 13 songs collected on Human Nature easily meet those expectations, the album is nothing short of a breathtaking listen from start to finish, an amazing piece of haunting and ethereal pop music, shamelessly beautiful piano and keyboard arrangements that linger somewhere between new wave and glam, led by singer Nikki Never’s outstanding voice and all drenched in an indistinct fog of reverb.

It is obvious that Terror Bird make rather dark music. But despite their name and contrary to the exponents of the superseded witch house movement, with whom they are sometimes carelessly and stupidly lumped together, the trio around Nikki Never is not obsessed with darkness, but with classic pop structures and harmonies. Triangles are not to be found here. And the shadows themselves, covering the songs like hoar frost at dawn, never appear to be ends in themselves or to serve as sad, reference-glutted post-apocalyptic jokes about contemporary popular culture. Instead, the album’s gloomy and sometimes eerie tone convincingly sublimates Never’s anxieties, without ever ending up in self-pity. In this sense, her approach is similar to the work of Chelsea Wolfe, whose haunting sounds are also honest means of expression and not cheap effects to attract the crowd gathered around the Petrine Cross. “Fear is such an awful thing”, Never sings in Keep Me Haunted, and who were we to disagree?

Human Culture is out now as a split release between Iowa’s Night People and the Berlin based imprint Adagio830. Order here, the first 200 copies come on beautiful clear vinyl. In case you’ve missed the point until now, this is a highly recommended piece of art and officially the first aspirant for this year’s top ten – mind my words.

Terror Bird – Make Believe

Terror Bird – Keep Me Haunted

By Henning