Nap Eyes: The Neon Gate

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Nap Eyes’ metamorphic fifth long-player collects a cache of nine fascinating songs recorded over the four years since Snapshot of a Beginner. The Neon Gate reveals classic touchstones (the uneasy interplay of physics and philosophy, perambulatory meditations, self-interrogating soliloquies, apertures of surreality, video games), but also evidence of divergent impulses toward nonlinear abstraction and longform improvisational composition (resulting in their most discursive, deconstructed, and deliquescent songs to date) and narrative and lyric formality (including adaptations of thorny poems by Alexander Pushkin and W. B. Yeats), imparting the sense that Nap Eyes have transmuted, as has their understanding of what a song is, what it can do, where it might go.

Nap Eyes’ metamorphic fifth long-player collects a cache of nine fascinating songs recorded over the four years since Snapshot of a Beginner. The Neon Gate reveals classic touchstones (the uneasy interplay of physics and philosophy, perambulatory meditations, self-interrogating soliloquies, apertures of surreality, video games), but also evidence of divergent impulses toward nonlinear abstraction and longform improvisational composition (resulting in their most discursive, deconstructed, and deliquescent songs to date) and narrative and lyric formality (including adaptations of thorny poems by Alexander Pushkin and W. B. Yeats), imparting the sense that Nap Eyes have transmuted, as has their understanding of what a song is, what it can do, where it might go.

Masters of subtlety. – NPR

Snapshot of a Beginner feels as much a modest masterpiece as [The Go-Betweens’] Spring Hill Fair or [Belle and Sebastian’s] Tigermilk. What sets them apart is the fear and trembling. – Uncut

One of the most fascinating songwriters we have today. – Newsweek

 

 

Highlights

  • Deluxe LP edition features a high-gloss jacket, full-color printed inner sleeve with lyrics and additional artwork, and 140g black vinyl.
  • Deluxe CD edition features a gatefold jacket with replica LP artwork and a lyrics insert.
  • RIYL: Yo La Tengo, MJ Lenderman, The Reds, Pinks, & Purples, The Only Ones, Swell Maps, The Modern Lovers, Felt, The Clean, The Verlaines, The Chills, The Go-Betweens, Kurt Vile, Courtney Barnett, Belle and Sebastian, all things Lou Reed.
  • Artist page/bio/tour dates/links/back catalog

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Tracklist

A1. “Eight Tired Starlings” 6:29
A2. “Dark Mystery Enigma Bird” 4:04
A3. “Demons” 6:36
A4. “Feline Wave Race” 6:11
A5. “Tangent Dissolve” 6:21
B1. “Ice Grass Underpass” 3:30
B2. “Passageway” 3:44
B3. “I See Phantoms of Hatred and of the Heart’s Fullness and of the Coming Emptiness” 4:49
B4. “Isolation” 7:59

Catalog Number/Release Date

PoB-077 / LP, CD, Digital: October 18, 2024

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Album Narrative

Photo by Josh Salter.

 

FINAL TRANSMISSION FROM THE NEON GATE / 20240730 / 0900R

The abstract joy,
The half-read wisdom of daemonic images,
Suffice the ageing man as once the growing boy.

– W. B. Yeats

In 1922, as the Irish Civil War raged, William Butler Yeats (1865–1939) wrote his “Meditations in Time of Civil War” while summering in Thor Ballylee, a Norman tower. In the final section of this visionary poem, tortuously titled “I See Phantoms of Hatred and of the Heart’s Fullness and of the Coming Emptiness,” the poet climbs “to the tower-top” to survey (or conjure) a fantastical scene involving, among other things, ladies riding “magical unicorns,” Babylonian prophecies, and Jacques Molay (the final grand master of the Knights Templar, burned at the stake in 1314 for his supposed heresy and homosexuality). “Frenzies bewilder, reveries perturb the mind,” Yeats writes. “Monstrous familiar images swim to the mind’s eye.”

After three years of silence, the Canadian band Nap Eyes have returned with their own meditations on the monstrous and familiar (or the monstrously familiar). The Neon Gate, their metamorphic fifth long-player, collects a cache of nine fascinating reveries recorded over the four years since their last album, Snapshot of a Beginner (five of which were released episodically throughout the spring and summer of 2024). I See Phantoms of Hatred and of the Heart’s Fullness and of the Coming Emptiness,” the album’s colossal penultimate track, is, along with “Demons,” their languorous adaptation of a phantasmagorical poem by Russian Romantic Alexander Pushkin (1799–1837), one of two ambitious but adept adaptations in which singer and principal songwriter Nigel Chapman unravels knotty, century-old verse into a fluid, memorable melodies across the loom of the band’s pulsing instrumental syncretism.

This fresh engagement with narrative and lyric formality complements the seven original songs on the record, which reveal classic Naps touchstones (the uneasy interplay of physics and philosophy, the nexus of fantasy and science fiction, perambulatory descriptions of landscape and weather, self-interrogating soliloquies, apertures of surreality, technological anxiety, video games), but also evidence of divergent impulses toward nonlinear abstraction and longform improvisational composition (resulting in their most discursive, deconstructed, and deliquescent songs to date). With The Neon Gate Nap Eyes have transmuted, as has their understanding of what a song is, what it can do, where it might go.

That all sounds deadly serious, but these songs are also as funny, quirky, and touching as ever, juxtaposing absurdist Middle Ages settings with concisely rendered quotidian details of journeys between earthly and cosmic planes (see the picaresque “Passageway” in particular). Castles and mystical critters abound, and faith in chemistry, astrophysics, and naturalistic observation tempers the spiraling doubt that can accompany deep cogitation. So the humble titular birds of opening track “Eight Tired Starlings” (Star Birds) must navigate light beams, curving spacetime, gravitational waves, and “billion-years-distant” galactic collisions. The pocket light beam, “complacent wizard,” and “breakfast plate” of eight-minute closing track “Isolation” (written, naturally, during COVID-19 pandemic lockdown) catalyze an uncomfortable revelation in the form of a one-liner: “how to get crushed under a gigantic / metaphysical rock.” In between, piloted by the band’s subtle, synthetic rhythms, “Feline Wave Race” emerges from Chapman’s current improvisational writing practice and experiments with spontaneous composition. We are transported, in the company of a digital wildcat, from deep space through telescoping deep time—“when the gas clouds / pass away and / the molecules / distribute / all across the fabric / of the horizon”—from “the edge of the moat / of the 13th-century castle” to 1996, the year Nintendo released the jetskiing video game Wave Race 64.

The recording methodology informed how the other band members—Seamus Dalton, Josh Salter, and Brad Labelle, often supplementing or supplanting their customary respective roles on drums, bass, and guitar with synthwork and drum programming—kept pace with this dream logic. Nigel recorded demos—many involving loops—and the band built recursive fractal patterns upon those skeletal armatures, often remotely (sometimes with assistance from engineer René Wilson). The origins of even the most otherworldy songs were often intimately domestic. Although most vocals were tracked live with the band, Nigel recorded his vocals for “Feline Wave Race” and “Dark Mystery Enigma Bird,” two disjunctive fables about animals told through stream-of-consciousness narratives, in a blanket-draped children’s cardboard castle in his parents’ basement.

When they exist at all verse-chorus-verse structures often disintegrate in favor of an unhurried unfolding, an emphasis on marking, attenuating, and collapsing time over standard musical notions of progression or refrain, a foregrounding of ellipsis over resolution. Only the careening “Ice Grass Underpass,” written in 2009, predating the band’s existence but prefiguring the sonic signature of their foundational first two albums, closely resembles, with Labelle’s snowy guitar squall (also evident in his lacerating, atonal leads scribbling through “Tangent Dissolve”), their older material. Speaking of snow: half-blinded by a blizzard and in danger of losing their way and plunging “headlong into some damned ravine,” the “master” and coachman of “Demons” are first mystified and then petrified by eerie apparitions of uncanny but uncertain spectral nature. “Is there a witch who is getting married?” the coachman speculates earnestly. “Some goblin they’re burying?”

These are demonic images, for sure, and this is familiarly eldritch territory for Nap Eyes, who in 2021 released “Blood River,” a song inspired by their online Dungeons and Dragons campaign. But beyond the Neon Gate, Yeats’s “wisdom of daemonic images”—in the ancient Greek sense of an animating human spirit, lacking any suggestion of evil—pertains more in these songs, inscrutably beautiful riddles which, a full decade into Nap Eyes’ career, “suffice the ageing man as once the growing boy.”

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Acknowledgments

Fripp-esque sustain, synths, and drum machines color a beautifully constructed record that brings to mind Aztec Camera’s High Land, Hard Rain or Scritti Politti’s Songs to Remember

– Uncut

The Neon Gate finds Nap Eyes adopting new forms and expanding—these are among Chapman’s most empathetic and charmed compositions yet. 

– Aquarium Drunkard

A remarkable accomplishment.

– Stereogum

Nap Eyes’ playful fifth album finds the perfect middle ground between live rawness and a glossy studio sound, as the band packs their mid-fi rock jams with fried guitar solos, electronic grooves, and a genuinely funky adaptation of W.B. Yeats … Miraculously, these contrasting pieces—hip-hop hi-hats and folky guitars, verbose lyrics and ripping solos—come together as a cohesive whole. Their members might not change like The Fall’s did, but the cliché remains: Nap Eyes are always different, always the same.

– FLOOD

How can you sustain this many ideas over the length of an album? Somehow, Nap Eyes manage it. The quartet manage to keep the energy — a very singular energy, multidimensional but featherlight, full of momentum but never sweaty or frantic — until the final note. Nap Eyes find themselves on a particular, illuminating wavelength this time around, and they leave their gate swung open for whatever may come their way next.

– Exclaim (Staff Pick)

Each new Nap Eyes album still feels like an event … The surprises that appear at every turn offset the studied slacker vibes of Chapman’s singing, and the whole thing ends up twisting memory and contorting space and time in the most satisfying ways. Nap Eyes seem to create a different niche for themselves with every new album; long may it continue.

– KLOF

These songs are poetic, and not just because the words are poems. Their poetry lies in the music itself: Chapman’s reserved but powerful delivery, their lulling, hypnotic repetitions, the avian chorus of squawking guitars and chirping synths. This marriage of words and music captures something ineffable that lies between thought and expression (to borrow a phrase from Lou Reed), and with it, Nap Eyes have produced a beautiful, literary, aspirational, and inspiring work.

– Post-Trash

Nap Eyes’ musical horizons only continue to broaden, and the vistas are something to behold … they stand on tiptoe as they continue to contemplate amidst their most adventurous songwriting to date.

– Northern Transmissions

The poem’s narrative nature fits perfectly into the realm the Nova Scotians have crafted; they’ve crafted this stunning elegance, almost as if it was meant as part of some ancient folk symphony. Nigel’s voice, like a moth to the flame … pulls you into the storytelling. Very few acts are crafting music in this matter, so feel free to raise your glass to these lads.

– Austin Town Hall

Clean, tightly wound power pop that places Chapman’s remarkable talent for lyric writing front and center.

– The FADER

Quietly devastating … a beautifully patient reintroduction to the group. 

– Exclaim!

Slow blooming bliss … worth the wait.

– Raven Sings the Blues

Masters of subtlety. Nap Eyes have made much ado about meaninglessness with rock ‘n’ roll songs that shake just offbeat and smart lyrics wrapped in bemused ennui.

– NPR Music

[Snapshot of a Beginner] feels as much a modest masterpiece as [The Go-Betweens’] Spring Hill Fair or [Belle and Sebastian’s] Tigermilk. What sets them apart is the fear and trembling in Nigel Chapman’s reedy monotone and guitarist Brad Loughead, who unleashes the full Verlainian screaming bluebird repertoire.

– Uncut

Few songwriters write about malaise with as much charm and empathetic chill as Nigel Chapman.

– Aquarium Drunkard

Brimming with passion and protest … Immediately familiar, yet bracingly distinct… one the most intriguingly idiosyncratic lyricists this side of Dan Bejar.

– Pitchfork

One of the most fascinating songwriters we have today.

– Newsweek