Carla Dal Forno enchants and evades on her solo debut
When Carla Dal Forno began working on You Know What It’s Like, she had mostly made music in collaborative settings, with various Melbourne bands: the Flying Nun-ready punk band Mole House, the death-folk outlet Fingers, and the trippy electronic duo Tarcar. Feeling compelled to try her own hand at production, she set up basic recording equipment at her kitchen table and set out to discover what her musical impulses might manifest standing alone. That exploratory mind-set permeates every aspect of her first full-length effort.
More meditations on moods than songs, these eight tracks are preoccupied with impermanence and ambiguity. From the first vocal track, “Fast Moving Cars,” Dal Forno makes her restlessness known: “To stay in one place I have no desire / The world’s so much vaster.” Sonically, this preoccupation translates as a dark, lo-fi electronic aesthetic that pushes and pulls listeners between genres. Everything from post-punk to U.K. dub, Chicago house to ’80s synth pop lives here in gloomy accordance.
Despite its suggestively familiar title, the album feels like a walk through a foreign world. Opener “Italian Cinema” is a sci-fi soundscape of aircraft whir rising and falling that’s reminiscent of the Barrons’ primitive electronic soundtrack for Forbidden Planet. The chalky, half-danceable chug of single “What You Gonna Do Now?” matches its own ambulatory video in which night falls onto black-and-white city streets. In “Dry In The Rain,” hollow wood and wind tones soundtrack a slow, ritualistic march through a damp forest, but one that rewards listeners toward its end with the album’s most beautiful vocal moment: an unintelligible wisp of a melisma that dissipates just as quickly as it appears.