The Blue Trees shows
Gorky's Zygotic Mynci taking a giant leap toward maturity. Having started out like their Welsh peers
Super Furry Animals as neo-psychedelic, rambunctious jangle pop merchants, the band here takes a folk turn toward elegiac tunes praising the four seasons and nature. With subtle, rolling guitars, sometimes sounding as if they're being played by
Leo Kottke himself, the band mines a similar territory as
Badly Drawn Boy's
The Hour of Bewilderbeast. But
The Blue Trees doesn't strive toward pop sensibilities or languish in tired instrumentals like
Bewilderbeast. Sure, these eight songs are appropriately memorable and melodic and there are more than a few instrumentals, but all of the songs take on a quiet, contemplative air. There's simply not a drop of pretension to be found, as if every acoustic instrument is covered in a subtle dew. Perhaps things slow down too much on "Foot and Mouth," but the track would be worthy of inclusion on the score to any film with introspective scenes. "Wrong Turnings" seems infused with the spirit of
Nick Drake; it paints a serene picture of rural bliss. The band picks up the pace on "Fresher Than the Sweetness in Water," while maintaining the grace of earlier tracks with the addition of what sounds like a mandolin and a violin (or fiddle).
The Blue Trees is quite an accomplishment; it's a continuation of the maturity and grace found on Spanish Dance Troupe. Anyone who's written off
Gorky's Zygotic Mynci might want to give this new-look band a second chance. The slow-burning songs of
The Blue Trees are delicately serene and of a charmed beauty. ~ Tim DiGravina