Deerhoof / Deerhoof Vs. Evil
Album: Deerhoof Vs. Evil   Collection:General
Artist:Deerhoof   Added:Jan 2011
Label:Polyvinyl Record Co.  

A-File Activity
Add Date: 2011-01-30 Pull Date: 2011-04-03
Week Ending: Apr 3 Mar 27 Mar 13 Mar 6 Feb 20 Feb 13 Feb 6
Airplays: 6 2 1 2 2 1 7

Recent Airplay
1. Nov 07, 2014: A Visit From Drum
Qui Dorm, Només Somia
4. Mar 13, 2012: meow
The Merry Barracks
2. Oct 17, 2014: A Visit From Drum (Legacies)
Let's Dance The Jet
5. Oct 05, 2011: Buford J. Sharkley's Themeless Escapades
Super Duper Rescue Heads!
3. May 19, 2012: The Mongrel's Stoop
I Did Crimes For You
6. Apr 19, 2011: meow
The Merry Barracks

Album Review
Wallace Brontoon
Reviewed 2011-01-29
Deerhoof
Deerhoof vs. Evil
Reviewed: 10/19/10

It's Joao Gilberto meets Francoise Hardy meets a barrel of sludge-- you pare this down, it has the DNA of mid-'60s lounge, ye-ye, and bubblegum. But the sound is rich-- all sorts of interesting noises and textures and distortion and weird freaking stuff. So much fuzz, so much distortion-- but also one of the catchier albums in recent memory. This is really just superb-- a lot to love for just about everybody.

Everything here is great; no FCCs.

1. * Sung in Catalan, with bongos and chimes and other jingling things. And noise-- computery sounds played in reverse, odd synths. Still a very sweet sound. (3:12)
2. * “Look Into the Sky”/”What is this Thing Called Love?” – sweet strumming and naïve chanting interspersed with fuzzed out Nintendo guitars and traffic-like bleeps and bloops. (3:29)
3. ** Some muffled buzzsaws, a lonely guitar strumming in a cave. Mopey male singing about atomic bombs, then she comes in, with a noisy call-and-response. And later, the tempo goes into triple-speed! Then some ugly feedback and screeching. Lot of stuff here. (3:31)
4. *God, she's pipey. High-pitched singing, joined to Flamenco-esque guitar. A sad folk melody... then a harpsichord joins. (2:16)
5. **Instrumental-- Crazy evil organ, sounding like a telephone ringing. Weirdly scary and driving-- like some mix of a Vincent Price movie score and a James Bond score, all baroque and purply. (1:36)
6. '80s synth noodling, then some off-kilter chanteuse-ing: “Me to the Rescue.” Ultra-fuzzy wall of guitars. (2:35)
7. Ambient lot of percussion, blips and bloops-- then overlapping singing-- she's doing her normal thing, he's basically talking. (2:53)
8. * Jumpy garage guitar-- “This is not based on a true story.” The return of the slinky evil organ! Just slinky all over-- buzzing and … at the end, power ballad solo! (3:03)
9. * Gurgling start, with jangling keys, unbalanced jibberish-scat singing. “Hey hey hey hey hey.” Then some Mr. Roboto or ELO-like backup. (2:13)
10. Japanese singing... pops along. (2:07)
11. *** Some Bowie-esque acoustic guitar, hand claps. “This is a stick-up” “Smash the windows.” Synthetic yelps. The voice recedes, other textures rise to front... weird, awesome perky middle bridge, and more thunderclaps of noise. (3:09)
12. Not a lot going on on this one... I'd skip. (2:41)

-Hervey Okkles

Track Listing
1. Qui Dorm, Només Somia   7. Must Fight Current
2. Behold A Marvel In The Darkness   8. Secret Mobilization
3. The Merry Barracks   9. Hey I Can
4. No One Asked To Dance   10. C'moon
5. Let's Dance The Jet   11. I Did Crimes For You
6. Super Duper Rescue Heads!   12. Almost Everyone, Almost Always