Menomena have been a wily proposition. With 3 albums already underneath the Portland three-piece’s common belt, their strain is still mislabelled as mostly as their name is mispronounced (it rhymes with “phenomena”). Although nominally lonesome by the cloudy indie tag, Menomena’s receptive to advice mostly encompasses on-going rock, freeform jazz and ambient electronica in a singular stride. The band’s approved songwriting process, in that all members minister and share outspoken duties, is kept in check regulating Deeler, a program programme grown by Menomenite Brent Knopf to concede members to collect and select particular tools inside of a tangible time signature. Welcome to 21st century jamming.   

2007’s much-lauded Friend and Foe introduced a wider assembly to Menomena’s sonic experiments, but whilst the manuscript was a masterclass in musicianship and arrangement, the unenlightened reams of receptive to advice tended to interest some-more to the conduct than to the heart. Although fourth manuscript Mines, expelled 3 years after the predecessor, retains Menomena’s heading virtuosity in production, here the band’s complex, monolithic sonic structures have been upheld by a unchanging romantic substructure that elevates the songs to brand new heights.

Regular fans needn’t fright that the rope have transposed their eclecticism with Kings of Leon-style locus rock. Every strain is a flowering microcosm of the own, office building clearly manifold elements up in to an astonishingly extensive whole. The roughly unbearably pleasing Tithe opens with agreeable percussion prior to a comfortable call of piano rolls in, followed by emotional guitars and layered vocals. BOTE primarily echoes the bold baritone sax of Friend and Foe’s Air Aid prior to pirouetting off in to a thunderstorm of slide-guitar and acrobatics percussion. The album’s swirling spiral is anchored by classic-in-the-making Dirty Cartoons, that showcases how far the rope has come in orchestrating emotion. The track’s stirring consummate is a masterstroke of set-up/knock-down writing, and even manages to have steel drums honestly affecting, that is zero short of miraculous.

Mines is a beautiful feat on a turn with TV on the Radio’s Return to Cookie Mountain. Their past collections might have valid Menomena’s technical ability and abounding imagination, but their ultimate bid ought to propel them to the really forefront of eccentric American music.

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