Album Review: Yo La Tengo - Fade


Yo La Tengo is Ira Kaplan, Georgia Hubley, and James McNew: An introduction for a band that, in most circles, does not need one. Started by husband and wife Kaplan and Hubley in 1984, Yo La Tengo has been writing and releasing records for over twenty five years. They have attained some mainstream success, but for the most part they hover just under the mainstream radar. They have cultivated a sound and remained consistent, not conforming to trends and traveling to the beat of their own drone. This puts the band in a unique position, neither blowing up nor falling into obscurity. It is their persistence to write the way they want that has allowed such longevity in their career. They haven’t fallen off. They will never offend their fan base by embracing disco (in a manner of speech). They are in a way, out of the effected reach of critics because their dedicated fans will likely not be swayed in a negative direction. In other words, Yo La Tengo doesn’t need you to like their music. They like their music and they will keep making music that they like. That being said, their latest album Fade, is actually quite exceptional.

Again I reiterate, Yo La Tengo are practically dinosaurs in the music industry, and so I hesitate to make comparisons to other bands that may share sonic similarities. Yo La Tengo predates many modern bands to which I might make a comparison and it is more likely that said bands have been influenced by Yo La Tengo, and not the other way around (that is not to say that the reverse could not be true). The Velvet Underground influence is obvious, from the repetitious droniness, to the fuzzy and technically avoidant, meandering guitar and of course there is Georgia Hubley’s vocals that embody a prettier, less atonal sounding Nico. But, this comparison is trite and at this point in the band’s existence they have achieved their own relevance outside of any recollection of Lou Reed, no matter how fond.  

Fade begins with some subtle percussive elements (guitar strings that better resemble tapping on an empty bucket), followed by some kind of synthesized shimmer and then the beat drops. Enter some guitar jangle and what emerges is the unmistakable pulse of a Yo La Tengo concoction.  A living, breathing machine, this first track, “Ohm,” ebbs and flows as a mantra, the essence of a sound developed over the course of almost three decades. Familiar mellow vocals deliver the lines, ”Sometimes the bad guys come out on top/ Sometimes the good guys lose/ We try not to lose our hearts, not to lose our minds.” Kaplan comforts the listener in a way as he delivers a kind of matter of fact, ethereal wisdom. He continues, “Nothing ever stays the same/ Nothing’s explained.”  His connotation is insecure, but not without hope in an all-accepting, enlightened, and philosophical way. The record plods along with the second track, “Is That Enough,” a reminiscent love ballad that continues with the theme of pensive reflection.  An unsure Kaplan asks the question, “Is that enough if it’s not clear the way I feel for you?” Then in comes the infectious upbeat third tune, with fast drums and a loud, funky bass riff. “Well You Better,” serves as an answer to the uncertain thoughts of the first two tracks and repeats in a spectacular and uplifting manner, “Please make up your mind before it’s too late.” This song communicates that it is fine to thoroughly contemplate, but at a certain point there is a demand for action, as Kaplan understands because of a familiar voice heard inside his head.

Each song that follows has something special happening as well. Hubley’s role is not to be marginalized as she sings beautiful lead on a couple of songs echoing the comforting tone and vocal delivery established early on by Kaplan. In “Cornelia and Jane,” Hubley’s voice conveys a desperate sense of longing that I have not felt from a new release in a long time. I will admit to holding Yo La Tengo in particularly high esteem. I have not been a lifelong fan of the band, only previously being exposed to certain songs here and there, mere highlights from an accomplished musical archive. This record however, has meant something to me on a personal level. I listened to Fade for the first time through headphones on a gray day, while traversing a windy and desolate beach. The music served as a soundtrack to a pensive stroll; a backdrop to a scene in a film where some kind of self-discovery first manifests. Realizations like this are fleeting and mostly inconsequential outside of the moment. It was through this lens that I experienced Fade and although each listen will yield a different relation to this music, I will remember that time on the beach because for me, music and memory are closely related. 

Listening to music is not a passive non-event, but an active experience. After the initial experience, each consequent listen is like a memory of the first time. Over time it becomes less real and more bias toward some designation that is readily acceptable; re-written into a comfortable narrative; dislodged from the place where it was felt; transformed into something understandable and mundane; no longer personal, but general and detached; no longer belonging to one’s individual self alone. Something like that cannot remain and so, in the end, it will fade.



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