
When I started working on this list, I told myself that I would refrain from three things: 1) mentioning too many bands, especially those that 99% of the population has never heard of; 2) letting my sentences become too complex and cloying; 3) commenting on the artists’ physical appearances. Since I have already failed at #1 and #2 (I mentioned thirteen different bands in the previous write-up, and I just used the word “cloying” immediately preceding a semicolon), so I might as well fail completely and come right out with it: Bradford Cox is ugly. I mean, he even gives Devin Townsend a run for his money. He’s so strange looking that when he laments that “Nothing Ever Happened” to him, we believe it. But can you really consider agoraphobia a weakness for him?—this skeletal sufferer of Marfan’s syndrome who classifies himself as a bisexual because neither males nor females want to be seen with him in public. Especially when he has put out three album-length releases in the course of the past year, along with a few other EPs that I’m too lazy to look up on Wikipedia right now. Underproduced in all the right places, Microcastle is exactly what it would seem like: a quantum realm into which one can implode, invisible to the naked eye and completely barricaded from the outside world. Distant, airy vocals merge with echoing guitars, spacious (yet concise) arrangements, requisite eeriness, 23% impenetrability and more tentacles in more pies than the Baltic kraken. Years ago I had a dream in which I was walking down a lonesome highway at night and came across a hatch in the ground. The hatch opened onto a ladder, which descended half a mile into the earth and eventually led to a vast subterrenean lake in the midst of what looked to be an abandoned nuclear testing facility. What would this dream be entitled, if dreams required labels? “Twilight At Carbon Lake,” obviously! Which begs the question: did Bradford Cox really steal his way into my dreams just to get lyric material? If he’s resorting to such tactics, then what can I do—tell him that he needs to get out more? No, that ugly bastard is welcome to pillage my dreams any time he wants. Now here’s to hoping that he never reads this review.