Why compile a wildly eclectic mix CD when you can create your own? That seems to be the guiding philosophy behind Portland, OR, sextet 
Blitzen Trapper. 
Wild Mountain Nation picks up where 2004's schizophrenic 
Field Rexx left off and offers a dizzying lo-fi psychedelic prog rock power pop alt-country indie rock jamfest (and that's just the first five songs). It's unlikely to win over any adherents of the "consistency is better" school of music appreciation. But if musical adventurousness and short attention spans are viewed as positive attributes, then these 13 short songs offer ample rewards. And if you don't like what you're hearing, just wait 30 seconds. 
It's easy enough to play spot-the-influences -- the early-'70s cowboy stoner songs of 
the Grateful Dead and 
the New Riders of the Purple Sage, the mad, fractured pop of 
Syd Barrett and early 
Pink Floyd, the sonic squalls and feedback blasts of 
Pavement, the fragile weirdness and melodic sensibilities of 
the Flaming Lips. What is more remarkable is, for the most part, these disparate influences actually hang together as coherent songs. "Murder Babe" is typical -- a choice slab of 
Who- and 
Kinks-inspired power pop, complete with windmilling power chords, that morphs into a psychedelic prog rock freakout worthy of 
the Soft Machine. The title track and "Country Caravan" would have been worthy additions to 
Workingman's Dead or 
American Beauty, while "Woof & Warp of the Quiet Giant's Hem" mixes prime 
Lips-inspired indie rock with what sounds like a hippie marching band. It's all wildly imaginative, and frequently excellent. The wild mountain nation appears to be a wide-open territory, but most of it is worthy of extended exploration. ~ Andy Whitman