Los Angeles Times, July 28, 2003
MUSIC REVIEW
Polar Cats revel in originality
By James Taylor, Special to The Times
Sampled geese, a synth kazoo, Javanese bells and a prominently placed
animatronic cat. Welcome to the world of the Polar Goldie Cats.
Boldly navigating the modern musical territory between Boulez and Beck,
this native quartet has been performing in Los Angeles for almost 10
years. In this time, the Polar Goldie Cats have earned a sizable amount
of New Music street cred — resulting in their selection this year to
play a concert for the Sound.at the Schindler House series.
These summer concerts usually present music along the
lines of John Cage or Glenn Branca, so there were whispers about
whether the Polar Goldie Cats belonged at such a serious venue.
These fears were promptly quashed when guitarist Bobb Bruno appeared on
stage in a white bunny costume. Looking like a character from a Takashi
Murakami print come to life, Bruno sat down and played a prologue of
long, sampled notes and modulating tone that segued to a mock J-pop
interlude. This playful bit of nihilist theatrics won over the sizable
Schindler House audience on Saturday evening — and gave a musical taste
of what was to come.
After a brief intermission, the real set
began. Sans costumes, the Polar Goldie Cats performed 14 original
pieces with a precision and musicality more often seen in chamber
groups; one almost expected to see sheet music amid the amps and pedals.
"A.F. Otter" featured big, distorted guitar chords, but eventually
revealed a core of tightly woven note patterns that recalled early
minimalism. "Maoist" began with Stockhausen-esque defiance: cymbals
played on the floor rather than on their stands, interjections of a
small silver instrument called a Xylomatic, and yet the piece morphed
into the most pop-ish number of the set. Some songs displayed pure
rock-ballad phrasing, but most used the pop lexicon only to investigate
other musical forms, such as bluegrass rhythms in "Spider."
Despite their garage band appearance and indie-rock sound, the Polar
Goldie Cats' music is entirely instrumental. Only drummer Rincy
Samucake added vocals to the evening, once to thank the audience for
coming and once to yell out the non sequitur: "To the Hibernaculum!"
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