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Arts

Issue — September 12, 2007

October 2; Walker Art Center; 612.375.7600.

Deerhoof

By Ray Cummings

Image by Courtesy of Deerhoof

If Deerhoof belonged to the Legion of Super Heroes, they'd be Color Kid; if new album Friend Opportunity were a big-budget Hollywood movie, it'd be Ocean's Twelve. The fanatically prolific, bicoastal trio of bassist/singer Satomi Matsuzaki, guitarist John Dieterich, and drummer/singer Greg Saunier spray-paint elaborate, deceptive masterpieces using loud, bright hues. Sometimes, of course, the band's power-pop pogo bops are just power-pop pogo bops—see the infamous "Gore in Rut," circa 1997's The Man, the King, the Girl, with that too-precious "bunny bunny bunny!" chorus from Matsuzaki. But Deerhoof are at their best when listeners are at pains to explain exactly what genre is being touched on at any given moment. Like, is "Siriustar"—from 2005's sprawling The Runners Four—mutated electric blues, a nearly a cappella showcase, or dynamite rock? Is Opportunity's disjointed, Pavlovian "Kidz Are So Small" a glorified drum solo, neutered techno, or a half-assed attempt at hip hop? Matsuzaki's elementary-schoolgirl vocals only complicate matters, adding a layer of twee, saccharine cuteness to every last gymnastic compositional or ProTools trick they pull. It's best, really, to just surrender to this gleeful stylistic identity crisis as the paintballs fly and spatter. Many have, which helps explain why the trio were recently featured on the mass-market indie-rock comp This Is Next alongside other sub-underground lifers like Sonic Youth, Ted Leo, Of Montreal, and Spoon.

From the Author Archive
Ray Cummings
5ingles — The Songs We CanÕt Escape (Sep 5, 2007)
5ingles — The Songs We CanÕt Escape (Aug 29, 2007)
5ingles — The songs we can't escape (Aug 22, 2007)
5ingles — The songs we can't escape (Aug 15, 2007)
More Fall Arts Articles
Graffiti artist 27 steps out of the shadows and into the galleries (Sep 12, 2007)
For 30 years, Lou Bellamy has run the nation’s preeminent African American theater. But what a theater critic really wants to know is: How’s his golf game? (Sep 12, 2007)
After a life-changing accident, performer and author Kevin Kling will never tell another tale the same way again (Sep 12, 2007)
After 15 years, James Sewell Ballet still thrives on the unexpected (Sep 12, 2007)
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October 2; Walker Art Center; 612.375.7600. (Sep 12, 2007)
November 16; First Avenue; 612.332.1775 (Sep 12, 2007)
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