OXFORD COLLAPSE
BITS (SUB POP)
"Bits" is album number four for Brooklyn's OXFORD COLLAPSE, but it's a first for them in many ways. Some of those ways will be immediately apparent to those of you who've followed their raucous, boyish exploits since their 2006 Sub Pop debut "Remember the Night Parties", or from their earlier efforts.
Their charming lack of guile, combined with a capable and focused aim towards the better of the '80s college-rock cognoscenti and Trouser Press favorites, has made for music that has found its way into backyards and across rooftops all over the city.
Recorded in chunks throughout 2007 with Eric Emm at the Brothers Studios, and Chad Matheny in spaces all over town, "Bits" corrects for time and experience, and shows a band artistically riding its own peaks.
The tension is still present in their three-way interplay (listen to them firing off of each other, squealing out of control at the end of "Back of the Yards") but the direction and presence in this set is open, flowing against anything they've done before.
It's the sound of fun turning into purpose, of a great band writing and playing their best songs, and knowing how great that feels.
This is the new OXFORD COLLAPSE, as a band and as a record: straightforward; memorable; mature, but not necessarily grown-up; just better.
It's all heart and ingenuity, the joyous racket that connects C86 pop to the present, made by three guys who are realizing that they can be mayors.