Music

No Age

Nouns
(Sub Pop)
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Reviewed by Aaron Burgess
May 6th, 2008

"Eraser" by No Age

The Los Angeles Times and The New Yorker (among others) have celebrated L.A. guitar/drums/sampler duo No Age as punk personified, but they seem to be confusing the band's DIY ethos, live energy, and general sense of community with the sound coming through the speakers. It seems like a trivial point to argue, but for someone picking up No Age's Sub Pop debut, Nouns, based on this sort of press coverage, terms like "punk" can seriously shift expectations. Whether they're commercially tainted or underground-oriented, those expectations will likely lean toward anger, exuberance, and perhaps even velocity—not the sort of noise- and sample-caked inertia Nouns embodies. As with the duo's primary influences—Sonic Youth and (especially) My Bloody Valentine—it's a rich, lovely sort of inertia, the kind in which you can spend days uncovering previously unheard melodies or phrases. But even as the drums bash away (the weirdly Jan & Dean-reminiscent "Cappo") and the distortion meter redlines, Nouns' effect is hazy, numbing, and merely pleasant—quite the opposite of experiencing No Age in person.

A.V. Club Rating: C+

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