Portland underground mainstay Dewey Mahood has been recording solo excursions as Plankton Wat since the early 2000s, even before the formation of renowned heavy psych jammers Eternal Tapestry. Returning to Thrill Jockey for the first time since 2013's excellent Drifter's Temple, Future Times is similar to other Plankton Wat records in how Mahood constructs hazy instrumentals with earthy guitar melodies that channel spiritual energies and sonically interpret the beauty of the natural world. However, the album's socially ...
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Portland underground mainstay Dewey Mahood has been recording solo excursions as Plankton Wat since the early 2000s, even before the formation of renowned heavy psych jammers Eternal Tapestry. Returning to Thrill Jockey for the first time since 2013's excellent Drifter's Temple, Future Times is similar to other Plankton Wat records in how Mahood constructs hazy instrumentals with earthy guitar melodies that channel spiritual energies and sonically interpret the beauty of the natural world. However, the album's socially conscious themes set the release apart from the rest of the project's catalog. The album was produced in 2020, as COVID-19 had forced society into lockdown, anti-police protests were surging across the nation, and wildfires were ravishing much of America's West Coast. Opening track "The Burning World" reflects all of this, slowly unfolding with glowing, echoing synths (played by frequent collaborator Dustin Dybvig) as Mahood's guitar swoops, lunges, and soars. An updated version of Plankton Wat oldie "Nightfall" appears on the album, and compared to the arrangement on Drifter's Temple, this one is a bit faster, tighter, and more majestic, with rising horns played by Victor Nash (the record's other major contributor) and a nearly desert blues-like feel to the guitar melody. "Modern Ruins" is both the album's lushest piece as well as its most melancholy, with Ash Dybvig's gorgeous flute melody backed up by Mahood's mystical guitar playing, which begins to seethe with fury at one point. "Dark Cities" staggers clanging guitar harmonies over a tinny drum machine throb, painting a sort of brief dystopian scene. The sparse, bluesy "Sanctuary" seems like it's meant to be soothing and reflective, but it's shot through with fear and trepidation. "Defund the Police" is elegiac rather than an enraged call to action, with sorrowful trumpet calling out over glacial synth drift and whirring delay. "Wind Mountain" brings the album home with a more rootsy, almost banjo-like guitar pattern, while ragged distortion and dubby horns keep the proceedings trippy and surreal. Future Times is a meditation on an uncertain era, and while it gets uneasy at spots, it takes solace in the healing powers of nature and remains optimistic that goodness will prevail. ~ Paul Simpson, Rovi
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Add this copy of Future Times to cart. $25.78, new condition, Sold by Revaluation Books rated 4.0 out of 5 stars, ships from Exeter, DEVON, UNITED KINGDOM, published 2021 by Thrill Jockey: THRILL538CD.