The lovely black-and-white cover photo of an old-school chandelier, combined with the film stock incorporated into the graphic design, suggests that the inelegantly titled
Nicollide & the Carmic Retribution is eclectic Swedish singer/songwriter
Nicolai Dunger's move into a lush, cinematic musical form as opposed to his usual back and forth shifts between sparse country-influenced folk-rock and quirky modern jazz in the company of the
Esbjörn Svensson Trio. The truth is that
Nicollide & the Carmic Retribution is something closer to
Dunger's version of
Van Dyke Parks' lavishly overstuffed 1968 debut
Song Cycle: the orchestral sweep is present here, but it doesn't replace
Dunger's previous chosen musical styles so much as it fuses those disparate styles into one at times deeply odd whole. The stark
Will Oldham-style twang of "There's a Room" and the haunted
Lee Hazlewood vibe of "Too Free to Be Gone" would have fit neatly on
Dunger's alt-country breakthrough
Tranquil Isolation, while the lengthy unaccompanied piano solo of opening track "10th Anniversary Collide" is pure
Svensson-style contemporary jazz, but through the presence of beautifully orchestrated, melancholy passages like "Our Filmscore" and "Picking Up the Pieces," the album's eclectic threads coalesce into an unexpectedly elegant and satisfying whole. There are moments of
Dunger's familiar oddity -- "Lifelong Song" imagines what might have happened if
Charles Ives had done the orchestral charts for
Nick Drake's
Bryter Layter, and in typical cussedness, the track called "Children Gathering (Outro)" actually precedes the track called "Children Gathering" -- but listening to
Nicollide & the Carmic Retribution as a whole, unbroken work reveals it to be one of
Dunger's finest so far. ~ Stewart Mason