Athens, GA isn't that big a town, so it's not surprising that 
Vic Chesnutt would cross paths with fellow hometowners 
Elf Power, or that he might invite them over to his house to make some music. What is surprising is how well their styles mesh on 
Dark Developments, a collaborative album recorded at 
Chesnutt's home studio. Like 
Chesnutt's excellent 
The Salesman and Bernadette (which he recorded with 
Lambchop as his backing band), 
Dark Developments is a collaboration in the truest sense of the word, as the frontman manages to bring out something new and richly satisfying in his musicians, and vice-versa. 
Elf Power's bright semi-psychedelic pop instincts brighten the corners of 
Chesnutt's sometimes dour melodies, and 
Chesnutt's playfully expansive, literate songs encourage the band to add some deeper sonic colors that wouldn't normally make their way into their work. 
Dark Developments also finds 
Chesnutt near the top of his form as a singer, with his lyrics getting an emotive and well-considered reading that's dramatic but never histrionic, and these songs boast a melodic concision that's a genuine change of pace after the grand-scale structures of 
Ghetto Bells and 
North Star Deserter. 
Dark Developments is a more approachable album than 
Chesnutt has made in a while, but he's hardly dumbed himself down; this music is as proudly eccentric as ever, and songs like "Little Fucker," "We Are Mean," and "Bilocating Dog" are sterling examples of 
Chesnutt's singular lyrical perspective, but the members of 
Elf Power lend an undertow of aural curiosity that's welcoming rather than off-putting, and the result is a small triumph of artfully applied Southern quirkiness. Fans of 
Chesnutt, 
Elf Power, or smart and adventurous pop music in general should put this one on their shopping lists.