What a difference an album can make.

Washington, DC, act Le Loup’s first record, The Throne of the
Third Heaven of
the Nations’ Millennium General Assembly (a
mouthful of a title taken from a painting by janitor/outsider artist
James Hampton), was fairly dark-clouded. Recorded by primary band
member Sam Simkoff direct into the built-in microphone on his MacBook,
the album boasted a grand theatrical sweep way out of proportion to
such humble origins, its dramatic, childlike apocalyptica reminiscent
of Arcade Fire and multi-tracked choral and banjo arrangements that
wouldn’t sound out of place popping up next to Sufjan Stevens on your
iPod’s random shuffle. The album was chilly, empty, and echoing, full
of (actual recordings of) thunderclouds and voices drifting off and
upward into a cavernous black voidโ€”banjo plucking from a back
porch that looked out on the end of the world interspersed with the odd
drum machine-driven cruise through the wastelands.

So, the bright, celebratory spirit and gently psychedelic sound of
their new sophomore album, Family, is striking, if not entirely
surprising. (Just a quick glance at the two albums’ coversโ€”the
first all black with claustrophobic golden scrawl, Family an
endless explosion of vividly colorful flowersโ€”gives some idea of
the shift in mood.) Not surprising, because Family‘s
freaky-but-friendly folk choirs, campfire harmonies, and space-echoing
spirituals have several recent antecedentsโ€”Animal Collective,
Grizzly Bear, and Fleet Foxes all spring to mind (and if that sounds
like an alarming amount of fauna, know that Le Loup is French for “the
wolf,” a name supposedly chosen by Simkoff as a joke about all the
animal monikers going around in indie rock). Still, if Simkoff &
Co.’s take on this stuff isn’t exactly earth shattering in its novelty,
it’s certainly pleasant and persuasive enough to rock your wilder
fireplace-lit dinner parties and potlucks this winter.

That would be about the right setting for the album’s convivial,
communal vibe, as well. Family begins with the exhortation,
“Celebrate the heavens/given back to man upon the earth” and ends with
the almost eight-minute anthem “A Celebration.” Its title track starts
with what sounds like a distant religious chant and spends its second
half as an all-embracing thanksgiving: “I know my father, I know my
mother/I know grandfather, I know grandmother/I know my sister, I know
my brother/but the blood that flows in this body and the blood that
flows through these veins/is everyone’s and everything’s.” Let’s see
your family say grace like that.

The whole album is decidedly wide-eyed (and possibly pupil-dilated)
stuff. Whereas The Throne forecasted the Rapture,
Family‘s “Morning Song” sees Simkoff greeting a new dawn,
“called through the window while the world woke up.” The tropical haze,
polyrhythmic hand percussion, and cresting guitars of “Beach Town” set
the scene for whisper-soft, nostalgic reverie: “Hold my hand/lost in
the static of the sand/we’re kids again.” (Those lyrics are later
echoed verbatim, like a memory, over the faded, sun-downing acoustic
guitar strum of “Neahkahnie.”) “Grow” continues, “Come to me, my
darling/and help me put aside my age,” over an anchoring backbeat,
overlapping harmonies, and a looped quasi-tribal yelp that wouldn’t
sound too out of place at Avey Tare’s campfire.

Le Loup

Sun Oct 25
Doug Fir
830 E Burnside