East of Eden's back-story is the stuff of movies. Following the release of
Taken by Trees' 2007 debut,
Open Field,
Victoria Bergsman and her trusty recording engineer,
Andreas Söderström, traveled to Pakistan to record
TBT's second album. They had to battle for a travel visa; the Swedish government warned them that travel to Pakistan was dangerous. Which it was --
Bergsman was literally carried off by some locals shortly after the duo arrived in Pakistan; the fact that she was an unmarried woman evidently made her public property.
Söderström saved her by posing as her husband, and thus disguised,
Söderström and
Bergsman went on to team up with an influential musician named
Malik to record this album. It's probably the last thing indie pop fans would expect from
Bergsman, who's best known for her sugary work with
the Concretes and
Peter Bjorn and John, and, oddly enough,
East of Eden is probably stronger simply because it's such a wild tangent. Like
Open Field,
East of Eden is a richly atmospheric album -- the main difference is in temperature. Compared to
TBT's chilly first album,
East of Eden provides a warm, vibrant listen; lush with rounded, organic Pakistani-influenced sounds, this is perhaps the happiest-sounding sustained work
Bergsman has produced since her departure from
the Concretes. It also sounds a whole lot like
Animal Collective's
Merriweather Post Pavilion, an influence that
Bergsman is not at all shy about.
Noah Lennox makes an appearance on one of the album's standout tracks, the pleasantly loopy "Anna," and there's even a minimalist, half-grinning cover of
Animal Collective's "My Girls" (appearing here as "My Boys").
East of Eden shouldn't be chalked up as a kind of mini-
Merriweather, though. Even though she's borrowed a lot here -- from
Animal Collective, from Pakistani music --
Bergsman manages to give it all a tender, sad-yet-sprightly touch that's completely her own.