With sparse instrumentation and vocals kept down to barely a whisper, Drunk’s Rick Alverson continues to offer a more stripped-down approach with his solo vehicle Spokane. Wispy, dreamy, and laced with a subdued melancholy, Spokane express a beauty so fragile it often feels like the music might shatter if you listen too hard.
Spokane is not for people who want to belong to something.
On Measurement, their 4th full-length, a shift emerges from the terse, melodic strings that have marked their previous recordings, to a sparser terrain occupied by long, empty spaces and tenuous ambiences. With the addition of Robert Donne (Labradford, Breadwinner, Cristal) on bass, Rick Alverson and Courtney Bowles reduce their songs to an unsentimental narrative, stripped of excesses, resisting the grandiose crescendo that has become so popular in thematic and orchestral music.
On "Temporary Things" Alverson and Bowles hollowly imbue the phrase "Should we talk about something else" with an unsettling domestic familiarity. "Addition", sung solely by Bowles, searches relentlessly for an accountable presence: "There's something you're not saying". And "Protocol" evolves from dependable clockwork into a harrowing, indecipherable whine. In it's subtlety and patience Measurement vacillates between the vulnerable and the cold, between resignation and meek defiance, ultimately assuming it's own unique place of surety and quiet definition. On "Cities", a couple laments "Oh Convention/ The willing wait out on the lawn/ I never wanted to be one/ I never wanted to be one".
Undertaking the sort of fragile examination the "closed-space" novels of Samuel Beckett explored, Measurement takes the minutiae of daily life and magnifies it.