When
White Fence's
Tim Presley hired
Cate Le Bon to play guitar for the live incarnation of his band, he set
DRINKS in motion. While touring, the two discovered the overlap in the weird psych sound of
White Fence and the off-kilter folk-psych
Le Bon dispenses, and they decided to record together. They started jamming with one rule in place -- neither could bring any finished songs to the sessions. Once they had some songs and ideas worked out, they called in
White Fence drummer
Nick Murray and started working on an album. Unlike a lot of collaborations between artists with definite styles where one can figure out exactly who did what,
Hermits on Holiday comes off as a total combination of
Presley and
Le Bon's styles that results in something totally new and unique. There's a tiny bit of
White Fence's wobbly craft in the finished product and maybe a bit more of
Le Bon's measured and precise sound, especially in the songs she sings, like the title track. What it mostly feels like is a hybrid of late-'60s art-damaged psychedelia filtered through the angular and choppy filter of post-punk, with snippy guitar lines twisting around each other, jumpy basslines hovering in the background, and
Murray's inventive and surprisingly musical drums pushing it forward. Add in a little bit of German art rock, some pleasantly aimless goofing around (especially on the goofily experimental "Tim, Do I Like That Dog"), and the occasional song that almost has a little pop in its DNA ("Laying Down Rock"), and the result is a pretty weird album that should challenge fans of both artists but ultimately win them over, thanks to the fun they sound like they're having plus their innate talents as guitarists, vocalists, and writers. Neither
Presley nor
Le Bon should give up their main gigs for
DRINKS, but if they got together now and then to record an album with as much good-natured charm and tricky bits as this, that'd be just fine. ~ Tim Sendra