The French duo's work is full of mystical characters we don't quite know what to make of: "Sexy Boy," "Cherry Blossom Girl," "La Femme D'Argent." They're lovingly painted but just beyond our reach, vivid but surreal. It's why they haunt us. The same might be said of Jean-Benoit Dunckel and Nicolas Godin's sound. For a decade, the band has brought an ambient vocabulary--full of strange synths and whispery vocals--to bear on deeply inviting pop melodies. It's the "chanson" vision realized in the digital era, a Gainsbourg daydream with a full palette at its disposal. On the group's latest, the lush and abstracted "Pocket Symphony," Radiohead production wizard Nigel Godrich helps them pick the colors. Led by a range of Japanese instruments, they prove to be the right ones.
Now entering the 10th year of a highly illustrious career that has seen the band grow in stature to become one of the most instantly recognizable names in music, Parisian duo Air (Nicolas Godin and JB Dunckel) return with Pocket Symphony, a career masterpiece and their most seductive and accomplished work to date. Jean-Benoit Dunckel and Nicolas Godin are modernists. Air embrace the new. Their music is intellectually stimulating yet intuitively simple; elegiac and triumphal; beyond pop and yet resolutely of it, too. Yet Air are no academically dry intellectuals either. If their music is full of French-style clichés about boy meeting girl, it’s done so playfully, with a knowing wink. They know their way round a good joke and can deadpan for the Republic.