Eli Reviews: AM Waves – Young Gun Silver Fox (2018)

I keep getting excited when I hear of a modern Yacht Rock band, and I keep getting disappointed. Cue disgruntled spiel: “music these days…” But it is true. I am disgruntled, and music these days just isn’t as good.

Young Gun Silver Fox is a team of a young singer-songwriter and an experienced old muso who met on Myspace back when, well, there was Myspace. It’s a cool story, but I don’t think it’s made for a great album.

For those who don’t already know, Yacht Rock is an after-the-fact name for certain adult-contemporary pop music of the mid-70s to the early 80s that featured blue-eyed-soul vocal stylings, sophisticated jazzy chord changes, tight grooves and pristine production. The easiest way to illustrate it is with the Michael McDonald era of The Doobie Brothers, but there’s a whole corner of the internet enthusiastic about whether songs from the era are Yacht or Not. Anyway, it’s some of my favorite music.

Unfortunately, all this modern retro-gazing often is coupled with the modern tendencies to look shallowly at things, and to lazily be derivative. Stranger Things did it with 80s movies, Vulfpeck does it with 70s jazz funk, and The Midnight does it with synthwave culture.

AM Waves gets the production quality component of Yacht Rock right, in that it sounds great. The wrapper is shiny. Meanwhile, meaningless lyrics sail by about it being midnight in Richmond and things vaguely aren’t the same as they were, and banal descriptions like lighting a cigarette get a full two bars to sit with the listener. Sudden music changes appear to derail any nice groove that’s winning you over as if to prove the musical vocabulary these guys have. “Lenny” is a song about having another drink, presumably from a Lenny, sung repetitively in falsetto over various musical tropes. “Take It Or Leave It” just about gets under my skin with the groove and a couple of nice chords until insipid backing vocals come in to repeat every one of the meaningless lines. That’s basically the story for the rest of the record.

Which is sad, because in searching back through the Yacht Rock catalogue (organized, of course, after-the-fact) they’re really not all winners either. So the world does need fresh new Yacht Rock. I’ll be producing some soon, but with my limited budget it might not make the cut on Yacht or Not…

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Eli Reviews: Friend Of A Friend – Homi & Jarvis (1983)

I started REALLY getting into 80s music around the time of the pandemic. If we were talking Hall & Oates, pre-2020 I would have said Abandoned Luncheonette (1973) was my desert island selection; since that weird time of isolation I was only about Ooh Yeah! (1988). During this time I was using almost all my waking hours to study music production and mixing online and basically, it seemed to me like the most authentic music I could record in my situation and at my technical level was synthesizer-based music, with retro electronic drum sounds and big reverbs and vocal effects to disguise what I feared would be amateurish recording and mixes. These instrument and effects all lived in my production software, as did I for most of this time.

I also became obsessed with the [dying] trends of synthwave and vaporwave, two different takes on 80s musical redux, mostly made by bedroom producers. These styles of music production emphasize and exaggerate different respective musical touchstones of 80s popular music: synthwave mostly being an edgy, pulsing instrumental image of driving in a neon night city, and vaporwave being a reverberant pastiche of RnB-inflected pop, as you would have heard in a mall.

(I really honed in on vaporwave in as EM/FM, on ‘Close Enough’.)

All that to say, these retrowave musics are usually exaggerations of these past tropes. What I love most about this album is that it’s almost more vaporwave than vaporwave. It’s full of sparkling keyboards (master arranger and GOAT sparkly-keyboardist Dave Grusin produced and played on this record – another reason to love it) funky, trebly basslines (courtesy of Marcus Miller) and a range of jazzy poppy tunes that would be yacht rock if they were produced differently.

“I’m In Love Again” is an iconic intro to the album. The arrangement is perfect, the chorus is super-catchy, there’s great jazzy chords pulling the ear along, a great solo section. But it’s really where it’s lacking that makes me love it: something in the mix or master stage has the record feeling like it’s almost amateurish or done on a budget, which is generally what vaporwave is designed to sound like. The vocals are less than perfect. I love it.

The writing credits bounce between the two singers and several other contributors. There’s precious little about this record on the internet and only a little on the two artists. Amanda Homi seems to have continued in an alternative sort of world music career. Her contribution “You Got Me Fallin'” hits me in all the spots, avoiding cheese with its purity and tasteful synth textures.

Even the weaker songs I find enjoyable for the depth of their arrangement details, credit to Grusin’s taste for harmony and groove. Lee Ritenour, David Sanborn and Harvey Mason Sr. also bring the goods – even Toots Thielemans makes an appearance, on ‘Some Hearts’. Cool key change in this one too.

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