Alex G is the most exciting heir in ages to the Troubled White Dude tradition: a line of introverted US singer-songwriters that leads via Elliott Smith, Kurt Cobain and Daniel Johnston all the way back to Big Star’s Alex Chilton. But that makes ‘DSU’ sound navel-gazingly bleak, which it decidedly isn’t. Giannascoli occasionally shakes things up with injections of psych-pop and dreamy funk, while ‘Boy’ and ‘Rejoyce’ possess the same lo-fi drive as the first two Pavement albums. Most importantly, the songs are there: ‘DSU’ is crammed with strong but subtle melodies and gently brilliant turns of phrase.
But there is something dark and weird that sometimes cracks the surface of this LP. The blissy groove of ‘Black Hair’ masks some less-than-sunny lyrics, while ‘Axesteel’ is punctured exactly 52 seconds in by a blood-chilling screaming noise. Haunting little fragments of piano and guitar litter the tracks like nightmares leaking into daydreams.
Incredibly, ‘DSU’ was put together in Alex G’s bedroom using a MacBook and a single microphone duct-taped to the desk. But it isn’t just a homemade gem: it’s an instant classic, the kind of window into a fascinating mind that you wish every solo album could be. Makes you think: if only Kurt Cobain had had a Bandcamp account, things might have gone better for the poor sod.
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