Drowned in Sound

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merz album
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by emily moore
  • Type: Album
  • Release date: 17/03/2008
  • Label: Gronland

Moving flat is horrible. It’s as nerve-shredding as skydiving but nowhere near as interesting, and leaves your wallet as empty as the grimy room you’ve just vacated. You’d imagine getting kicked out of your home to be a whole new level of misery. But trust Conrad Lambert, AKA Merz, to pen a darkly romantic album that could soundtrack the tragic yet uplifting tale of an eviction as directed by Wim Wenders.

This album is much softer and less showy than any of his previous work. Innovative acoustic compositions overlaid with all manner of electronic bells and whistles got him noticed back in ’99, when he walked from a deal with Epic after just one album. Today his music exudes the quiet confidence it must have taken to turn down stardom when it was offered on a plate.

Moi et Mon Camion is, at heart, a traditional traveller’s tale. The opening track recalls Simon & Garfunkel’s ‘Homeward Bound’ in spirit, its lament that “the future looks bleak to me” underpinned by a not entirely downbeat acoustic guitar and multi-layered, octave-spanning male and female voices. While backing vocals pop up here and there, including contributions from the Old Man of Bath, a Tom Waits-alike local, it’s Lambert’s extraordinary voice that unifies the album – high and pure, rough-edged and wise. His songs are more timeless than modern and honed to a fine emotional candour.

While most melodies are based around simple rising-falling scale fragments, they’re deceptively complex, often layered and contrapuntal. On the haunting ‘Malcolm’, horns, strings, xylophone and vocals thread independent songlines over and through each other and a minimal bassline. Or, just when you expect a major-key resolution, he wrong-foots you and the unresolved chords of ‘Presume Too Much’ echo in your head for days. The production is sparer than on any of his past work, and all the more effective for it. ‘Shun (Sad Eyes Days)’ tootles along as a quiet, almost trip-hoppy number until the last minute, when eerie ‘Kashmir’-esque synths kick in with urgent force.

Merz is as much about kitchen-sink details as starry-eyed fantasies, but the desk job and the neighbour’s noisy dog are invoked more to anchor his airy, romantic visions than sorrowfully to measure out a life in coffee spoons. It’s a moving mix of the everyday and the transcendent, or at least the desire for transcendence. The title of the album and eponymous first song is the name of Lambert’s oft-employed removal firm. But which of us mortals has ever used a removal firm with a cute French name that lends itself to musical inspiration? He’s otherworldly, or maybe just bonkers, but charmingly so. He’s also deeply concerned about where to go now, what with that eviction and all. From a local arena (“You park in the wrong place, you start a war”) to an international one (“The Basques need a place, the Irish need their place”), there are worryingly few locations that welcome the traveller with open arms.

One solution is offered in the gorgeously escapist ‘Silver Moon Ladders’, which imagines “look[ing] back at the Earth’s blue light” from orbit. Another is offered in the gorgeously world-weary closer, ‘The First & Last Waltz’: ‘Each of your days sees a new sun; every new sun sees a different world.’ The journey is the destination.

  • Merz 8 / 10
Words: emily moore

I was wondering what the hell happened to Merz.

And now i know.

I quite liked some of the stuff on his first album. This sounds very nice indeed.

I used the words "quite nice" and "very nice". That probably makes me Merz' biggest fan.


quite liked ^

Why no delete button?

Ah what am i talking about? No one will read this. It's Merz!


I'm reading this!

He was on this months Clash cd, he's really good!


I have a kernel of admiration for Merz

He remains that slightly dippy, unfathomable presence making music in a pop-world of megastars whose lifestyles and fame he has pretty much eschewed in favour of remaining slightly dippy and unfathomable.

Plus he makes pretty, and on occassion, funky musics. Glad to see he's still at it.


Lotus is amazing!

One of the best songs of whatever year it was released in. 1999 was it?