Audio By Carbonatix
Keep Miami New Times Free
We’re aiming to raise $7,500 by April 26. Your support ensures New Times can continue watching out for you and our community. No paywall. Always accessible. Daily online and weekly in print.
The world of indie rock has never really embraced the concept of the instrumental jam band. The few exceptions that (barely) fit into that category — Godspeed You! Black Emperor, Mogwai, Tortoise — don’t really follow the genre’s rules, instead occupying a space between the Fall’s deconstructed rock and the free-form noodling of hippie magnates Phish and the Grateful Dead. Toronto’s Do Make Say Think manages to mine the best of these disparate worlds, resulting in a unique blend of improv rock and tightly knit arrangements on its newest record, You, You’re a History in Rust. Earlier albums have flirted with this expansive aesthetic, albeit more in a Medeski, Martin, and Wood style, as jazz cadences are an integral part of the band’s repertoire. But this new collection feels more directional, even as songs stretch toward the ten-minute mark. After the tentative ambient guitar and brass moments of the album’s opener, DMST employs precision on tracks like the start-stop “The Universe!” But as always, the group is more concerned with the song’s journey than its destination, allowing moments of serene guitar wash and post-rock breakdowns throughout, as well as the occasional hushed vocal. DMST continues to make instrumental rock interesting, keeping the melodic meandering to a bare minimum.