Music

[Indie Rock] Rogue Wave

Annie Zaleski

The twinkling indie rock Rogue Wave conjured for Sub Pop fit perfectly on the Seattle label’s roster. Over the course of two albums, the Oakland, California, group functioned as a wispier version of The Shins; brooding art-school dreamers to the latter’s poetic English-major musings.

Weirdly enough, now that Rogue Wave has jumped ship to the bigger Brushfire—you know, surfer-boy Jack Johnson’s label—the band has its head in the clouds even more firmly than before. In fact, anyone expecting concise pop cloudbursts should go elsewhere; Gate’s songs meander lazily, brimming with fluttering acoustic guitars, stomping piano, shimmery electronics and Zach Rogue’s honeyed vocals. The occasional nod to pop constructs—“Own Your Own Home” feels like an alternate-reality Camper Van Beethoven tune, while “Chicago X12” is a pleasant slice of jangle-folk—keeps things interesting, although Gate’s habit of ending songs with epic crescendos or extended noise-jams is unfortunate (and boring).

And indeed, the main problem with Gate involves its ambition. The album simply feels stuffed with too many ideas and sounds, which causes a lack of cohesion and creates a logjam of unfocused tunes. Tellingly, the best song on Gate is a relatively sparse affair: a somber ballad called “Missed,” where ghostly piano, delicate dull-roar riffs and Rogue sadly crooning, “Ooh, I miss you love” swirl together in lovely sadness.

ROGUE WAVE

Asleep At Heaven's Gate

** 1/2

  • Get More Stories from Thu, Sep 20, 2007
Top of Story