We’ve updated our Terms of Use to reflect our new entity name and address. You can review the changes here.
We’ve updated our Terms of Use. You can review the changes here.

Plastic Explosives

by The Caribbean

/
1.
I Thee Wed 02:57
2.
3.
Tarmac Squad 03:47
4.
5.
French Radio 03:18
6.
7.
Great! 01:12
8.
9.
10.
Calla Lilies 02:06
11.
12.
Jamie Theme 00:44
13.
14.
15.
16.
Apple Theme 01:02
17.
18.
Siamese Sons 02:09

about

Let us be clear about this: Plastic Explosives is one of the finest recent records we’ve found, from any act, local or otherwise. (It) is beautiful, plain and simple, and a treat to listen to passively. It keeps gently reminding you, though, just how subtly rich its songs are, how much it has to offer. It’s a masterpiece, tucked away in and revealing the crowded streets and quiet record stores of the District.
• DCIST

Following up their acclaimed William of Orange EP, The Caribbean releases Plastic Explosives, an album comprised of twelve songs and a half-dozen interludes. It was produced by Beauty Pill’s Chad Clark (who recently produced Wilderness' debut record) and the group at Silver Sonya and the legendary Inner Ear in Arlington, VA as well as in the Washington, D.C.-based band’s National Crayon Museum studio. Plastic Explosives broadens the five-piece’s signature “late-night” sound, marrying a mid-afternoon pop immediacy that evokes Simon and Garfunkel, the Shins, and the Dismemberment Plan with a narrative angle that could only come from a frustrated short-story writer and former ad pitchman. The record’s six interludes quote from and hint at the actual songs, suffusing the project with music that recalls gems like Pet Sounds or the Hang-Ups’ Second Story. Michael Kentoff, The Caribbean’s songwriter and a veteran of the D.C. scene states, “Over the course of our two previous albums and last year’s EP, William of Orange, we refined the idea of songs that explore ambiguity, taking advantage of found sounds and the little accidents that happen while writing and playing. Now we’re pushing ahead, away from indeterminacy and into something deeper and I hope more profound. But it’s not that these songs are anthemic – if anything, they’re the most intimate things we’ve ever done. They’re like very elaborate phone messages." Plastic Explosives contains the band’s unique mix of songs of foreboding, domestic peril, and vaguely illicit behavior. Kentoff ’s characters spy on each other, arrange meetings in bars and airports, and make big plans – but sometimes end up too afraid to even leave their basement apartments. Ineptitudes of all sorts are explored, but rarely is judgment passed. As Kentoff noted, “We’re the anti-Don Henley; we don’t talk down to our characters.” The group – singer and guitarist Kentoff; multi-instrumentalist and editor Matthew Byars; guitarist Dave Jones; keyboardist and bassist Don Campbell; and always-out-of-town drummer Antony Dennison – set out this time to make a sound big and bright enough to both encompass and refract guitarist/vocalist Kentoff ’s unconventional stance. Whereas The Caribbean’s previous albums History’s First Know-It-All and Verse by Verse explored sonic side streets, Plastic Explosives travels down the widest boulevard. “We always start out with a drum part here, a guitar line there, a vocal melody from left field, and the songs grow from those elements,” Kentoff said. “This time we found the songs called for a sound that needed to be immediate and immense – many Fender guitars, a lot of different instruments, beatboxes, deep kick drums, and vocals upon vocals. Nothing about it is tentative.” In fact, Kentoff explained that “we needed to curb our inclination toward modesty a little.” Even their credit for producer Clark reflects the modus operandi: “Amplified by Chad Clark.” As with the William of Orange EP, the packaging for Plastic Explosives was created by Hometapes’ own creative team of Sara Padgett and Adam Heathcott. Carpentry and location photography gave way to a series of six images, displayed full-frame in the six-panel digipak format and already likened by some to record covers created by the famed Hipgnosis design studio of yesteryear. The booklet, contrasting in black, white, and flat color, is the viewer’s key to the photographic “song maps.” With Plastic Explosives, Padgett and Heathcott are asserting the power of packaging and have taken the opportunity to keep the dialogue going long after the CD spins to a stop.

credits

released September 20, 2005

license

all rights reserved

tags

about

The Caribbean Washington, D.C.

They’re taking Brill Building songs and writing them in invisible ink, turning jazz standards into Twilight Zone episodes, turning folk songs into clouds of fog.

• POPMATTERS

contact / help

Contact The Caribbean

Streaming and
Download help

Redeem code

Report this album or account

If you like The Caribbean, you may also like: