The stretch between
System Preferences and
Earlimart's previous album,
Hymn and Her, was the longest gap between the band's releases, but in that time
Aaron Espinoza remained busy in the studio, producing records for
Ben Gibbard,
the Henry Clay People, and
Port O'Brien. Also, a collaboration with
Grandaddy's
Jason Lytle for
Admiral Radley's
I Heart California in 2010 played a big part in shaping the band's new direction. Even more so than before, comparisons with
Grandaddy are unshakable on
System Preferences, and as the techie
Sophtware Slump-ish title suggests, electronic atmospherics are incorporated with
Earlimart's usual dreamy, lovelorn sound. Still writing as a two-piece,
Ariana Murray takes the wheel on a few titles. Her songs "Get Used to the Sound" and "10 Years" are generally closer to the dream pop variety, sweetly sung, and floating in echo. When her male counterpart takes the lead role, aside from the aforementioned spacy flourishes, songs like "Crestline, Ca.," "I'm a Safe Inside," and "A Goodbye" are dead ringers for
Elliott Smith numbers, with similar
Beatles-inspired chord progressions played in an intimate drum, bass, guitar, and piano setup. "Internet Summer" picks up the pace, as if to remind listeners that the group is still capable of brisk guitar pop, but the bulk of the album is elegant and bittersweet -- in fact, so low-key that it would be an easy album to overlook, which would be a shame since the songwriting caliber is at a career high. Instead of sounding labored and forced,
System Preferences is gentle and effortless, as if it were recorded four months after
Hymn and Her, instead of four years. ~ Jason Lymangrover