Future Islands play a CD-release party for In Evening Air at Berkeley Cafe Tuesday, May 4, at 9 p.m. Lonnie Walker and Low Dens open.

In Evening Air, the full-length debut from Baltimore-via-Greenville trio Future Islands, accomplishes a lot with very little. Even calling the band a trio misleads, as the term might evoke images of a guitar, bass and drums triumvirate, bashing away at viscous rock music. But this is a hooky, dark dance band. Sam Herring only sings and sashays. William Cashion just plays bass. Gerrit Welmers adds programmed drums and beds and blips of keyboards.
Future Islandsโ sound doesnโt suffer the duo-with-frontman configuration. Cashionโs distorted bass pairs deep, wide textures with terse, neck-snapping melodies. Welmersโ keys luxuriate in layers of noise on โAn Apologyโ and sprinkle variations on a sad-eyed pop theme during โSwept Inside.โ โVireoโs Eyeโ stacks layers of tones and tempos, using simple repetition to create the illusion of a bigger band.
Whatโs more, In Evening Air is a little LP: Its nine songs combine for 36 minutes, and the mid-album title track is a luminous instrumental miniature that suggests sound artist Philip Jeck rebuilding a Ziggy Stardust instrumental. Still, these minutes are full of emotional intensity given perfect urgency by Herringโs strangled soulman voice. Suggesting The Postal Serviceโs Give Up losing its innocence, these springy tunes come swallowed by storm clouds. On โLong Flight,โ for instance, Herring takes us into the bedroom where he saw his live-in lover cheat, singing, โI really wanted you there/ But you ruined what was love/ Just โcause you needed a handโ like heโs still sweating through the nightmare. โCall on me/ Iโll be there always,โ he chants during โInch of Dust,โ gradually getting louder with the phrase, turning what first seems an offer of reassurance into a cry for mutual help. You sort of want to give the dude a hug. Mostly, though, youโll want to sing along.
Neither Future Islands nor In Evening Air are remarkable only for their efficiency. Size matters only insofar as the songs and the performances succeed, and, here, both are mostly perfect. In Evening Air stands as one of the yearโs best recordsa poetic, provocative and powerful statement by a band patient enough to recognize its limitations and turn them into intoxicating, electric atmospheres.


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