When bass player Jacob Long left dance-punk trio
Mi Ami, the band resurfaced as a completely different beast. Remaining members
Daniel Martin-McCormick and Damon Palermo put down drum sticks and stringed instruments of any kind, opting instead for vintage drum machines and samplers, stretching out the parameters of what the "rock" version of
Mi Ami had begun. Where earlier recordings had much in common with the early-'80s no-wave grooves of
Liquid Liquid or
ESG, the electronic musings of the duo version of the band took the form of deep house-informed beats and dreamily chopped samples, the only real remnants of the
Mi Ami of old being
Martin-McCormick's occasional screeching vocals. Picking up where 2011's Dolphins left off,
Decade finds the band subtly refining their new approach over the span of four lengthy tracks. The sub-aquatic pulse of Palermo's 707 drum machine beats keeps all four tracks in a similar downtempoed groove, laying a foundation for
Martin-McCormick's zoned keyboards and a variety of samples both nightmarish and dreamy.
Decade rolls by as a unified whole more than it does separate stand-out tracks. The lazy drone of "Time of Love" spills into the equally elongated "Free of Life," both songs working as wide open canvases for the duo's playful experimentation with floating sounds and rhythmic interjections. Vocals and structure don't play much of a role in
Decade until album-closer "Bells," which matches the feverish house drive of the rest of the album but fills it out with dynamic breakdowns and shifts in sound. Riding atop everything on this track are
Martin-McCormick's unique vocals, bratty but impassioned, and treated with ever-changing delay in the vein of
the Pop Group or even
Throbbing Gristle's more demented approaches at pop.
Decade is definitely less about focus and more about throwing it all at the wall in slow motion, but by the time "Bells" rolls around, the band seems to finally have a grip on what's sticking, and the potential for more fully-realized future work comes into view. ~ Fred Thomas