Friday, January 6, 2012

Fetch the Compass Kids

Fetch the Compass Kids Review



The Danielson Family (or Famile)--you either love 'em or you hate 'em. If you passed on their debut, A Prayer for Every Hour (which netted bandleader Daniel Smith, big brother to the rest of the tribe, an A on his senior thesis at Rutgers), chances are slim to none that their fifth release will sway your vote. But if you've never heard of the Danielson Famile, they're worth a listen--if for anthropological value alone. Smith sums up the group's mission best: "The Danielson songs are from God, inspired by the Holy Spirit, and written through me." They're a Christian band, albeit one filtered through art school and indie rock rather than conventional ideology. Yet none of this hypothesizing can prepare you for their music. As children, the Smiths--all five of them--would join their parents for folk masses in the living room. The improvised jam sessions grew into Daniel's project, with his shrill falsetto (endearing? annoying?) leading the cacophony of flute, banjo, organ, and drums his siblings provide. Of the 12 tracks that comprise Fetch the Compass Kids, some songs are loud, others quiet. Aside from that distinction, the lines between each composition are blurred, and the album is best listened to as a whole. "We Don't Say Shut Up," with its "Hush, hush, what's the rush" chorus, could be a playground song--its lyrics are that much fun to sing--while "Good News for the Pus Pickers" is a whirling dervish of percussion and brain-piercing falsettos. God certainly has a sense of humor, and no one knows that better than the Danielson Famile! --Andria Lisle


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