For all the personnel overlap, the two musical projects are sonically distinct.
Pond's batshit-crazy vibes are attributable to the main songwriting duo of Allbrook and Watson. Take, for instance, the band's new eight-minute, three-movement single, "Burnt Out Star," an over-the-top amalgamation of electronic loops, bossa nova rhythms, and jam-band improv. It's a master stroke from an instrumental standpoint, but Allbrook's boyishly unserious vocal performance makes the overall package seem as mature as an eighth-grader slapping his classmate in the back of the head because he's bored.
"A lot of our songwriting is premeditated, but that song had a lot of jamming," Allbrook says. "It's very playful. The first section was a chord progression and loop that Jay came up with on his own, and I did all the lyrics. For the jam, we just got a sequencer and everyone took their turns fucking around over it. I did a vocal thing by looking at random pages of my notebook."
The band is set to play at House of Creatives Saturday, November 10. Allbrook says Pond has a singular mantra: doing whatever pleases the bandmates in the moment. For example, Watson bounces between playing synthesizer, bass, and drums to accommodate the rotating cast of characters who fill out the touring lineup. "Usually, Jay gets sick of playing what he's playing," Allbrook says. "We'll get close with someone who kind of joins the family, and we're like, 'Hey, we should get that person on whatever instrument they're good at,' and we'll shuffle Jay off onto another instrument."
Somehow, Pond has remained on the same path since debuting in 2009 with Psychedelic Mango, an evolution evident all the way up to its forthcoming, as-yet-untitled eighth album. "The songwriting and the instrumentals, they're always developing and changing. I suppose we're just continuing," Allbrook says. "You can probably estimate the sound and vibe of [the new album] if you trace the trajectory of everything we've ever made. You can sort of predict what it would land on."
Indeed, "Burnt Out Star" picks up right where Pond's seventh studio album, The Weather, left off. Especially on the album's second half, the band repeatedly veers off-road for the sorts of sonic detours that make all of its music so much fun. The Weather did represent a step forward for Pond, however, because the bandmates were favoring lo-fi sounds
Allbrook explains that "Paint Me Silver" started in the same place as "Burnt Out Star" but received a different interpretation as the band filled in the blank spaces. "That song was Jay coming up with a loop and chord progression, [then] me coming up with a bunch of lyrics and structuring it around the verse and chorus," he says. "If it's a good little thing like that, then it doesn't really need or want to go much longer than a few minutes. That keeps it succinct. And that seems to be the way most of our songs come up — a chord idea from Jay, lyrics and structure from me, and then glittery sprinkles from the other lads."
It's been a winning formula going on a decade, and Pond intends to "keep chugging along at [its] own little pace," Allbrook says. He's tight-lipped about the forthcoming album's title and release date but hesitantly divulges that it's complete — and Parker returns as a producer. "I'm always reticent to say that," he notes, "because it becomes the headline of every single article about the album."
Pond. Saturday, November 10, at House of Creatives Music Festival, Virginia Key Beach Park, 4020 Virginia Beach Dr., Miami. Single-day tickets cost $79 to $159 via hocfest.com.