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Islands 2023 Photo 2

If Islandsโ€™ last record, (2021โ€™s Islomania) was a Saturday Night Fever dream, then the follow upโ€“And Thatโ€™s Why Dolphins Lost Their Legsโ€“is the Sunday Morning comedown.

โ€œ[Islomania] was exuberant and hopeful, and Dolphins is like the grim rejoinder,โ€ songwriter Nick Thorburn says. โ€œThe songs attempt to tap into some of our darker impulses. The grim, unshakeable feeling that we live in hell, that there is no future, that all hope is lost. I wanted to explore those depths and see where it lead me.โ€

Hopelessness aside, the collection of songs represents a big leap forward. With addictive hooks at every possible turn, Dolphins (the 9th record in the catalogue), stands out as quite likely the strongest and most articulate Islands album yet. Nick Thorburn and band manage to slyly tap into both the pain and the joy of living, often simultaneously, while stripping the music down to its simplest element: a strange sample rubbing up against a bouncing bassline, a snappy kick and snare firing off against a persistent, hooky guitar line.

The music itself is settled on the spaces in between: the silences, the spareness. Thereโ€™s an evocative wooziness within each song; a disorienting disassociation that draws you into its strange world.

โ€œI was in my head/all my friends and all my lovers dead,โ€ Thorburn sings on the second song, โ€œAnd All You Can Do Is Laughโ€. Ruminating on a world being destroyed before our eyes, Thorburn, sounding like an acquiescent ghost, continues on: โ€œSomethingโ€™s changed/ Somethingโ€™s wrong/Something strange must be going on/Since it came/Things just arenโ€™t the same/You see the light/Coming over the hill/From up in the sky/Like a thief they come in the nightโ€. Where do you go from there?

Darker, it seems. And yet, always with a sense of humor. โ€œHeadlinesโ€ paints the picture of a feckless passenger in a car, helplessly careening into a tree during a volatile argument with a partner. But all the passenger can think about is how the event will be framed in next dayโ€™s papers. The paperโ€™s headline: โ€œPoor Tree, (Man Died).โ€

The writing process began a lot differently, though. Initially, Nick had no intention of writing songs in the way he knew how.

โ€œDuring my time off from Islands, before releasing Islomania, I was finished with rock music, bored of the lyrics I was writing. I was toying with the idea of makingโ€ฆIโ€™m embarrassed to sayโ€ฆ beats.โ€ Thorburn says, with a laugh. โ€œI began tinkering at home, and quite quickly compiled a huge folder of instrumentals. I got together with my friend Fat Tony and we made a few songs together. But as things went along, I found myself getting increasingly excited by the possibility of a lyric here or there. At first it was just a hook, and then a verse. Before long, I was sitting on a big pile of Islands songs.โ€

The songs, though, are more idiosyncratic and off-kilter than Islands has sounded in a while. And thatโ€™s a good thing. Though refined and deliberate, the music has a certain playfulness that Thorburn hasnโ€™t tapped into in quite some time. The record is a notable departure from previous outings, but the DNA of Thorburnโ€™s early work, namely his first band The Unicorns, can clearly be heard throughout songs like โ€œHeadlinesโ€œ, โ€œLifeโ€™s A Jokeโ€ and โ€œAnd All You Can Do is Laughโ€.

Thorburn elaborates on one of the albumโ€™s main themes: โ€œI was interested in the idea of regression. Evolution in the opposite direction, you know? We think of fish evolving by growing legsโ€”walking out of the primordial swamp towards an enlightened existenceโ€”but what if things went the other way? What if a four legged dolphin took one look around, saw what humans had done, and said โ€˜fuck it, Iโ€™m going back inโ€™?โ€

โ€œAnd actually,โ€ Thorburn says, โ€œthe title itself came from a conversation I overheard between a couple of strange men in a friendโ€™s backyard in Los Angeles, one of whom insisted that dolphins did in fact evolve to have legs at one point, but very quickly returned to the ocean, going back the other way.โ€

While Dolphins began the journey at his home in Los Angeles, Thorburn eventually traveled to famed Hollywood studio Sunset Sound to work with Chris Coady (โ€œFeel A Wayโ€), upstate New York with Ratatatโ€™s Mike Stroud (โ€œPelicanโ€) and finally landing back in Los Feliz with producer Patrick Ford for the rest of the batch. This final stage in the process gave the songs their legs, allowing them the room to evolve out of the primal goo and live freely in the world.

And It was here that the light started shining through.

โ€œThis record is me at my most bleak, unquestionably,โ€ Thorburn says. โ€œBut thereโ€™s a point to it all. Itโ€™s not just gleeful nihilism. With the song โ€˜Superstitiousโ€™, I imagined what might happen if I just succumbed to the chaos; let it wash over me. If you can weather that storm, you can hit upon something quite beautiful. Something that feels outside of you, something almost supernatural. Maybe thatโ€™s what grace is.โ€

The albumโ€™s final track (โ€œUp The Down Staircaseโ€) flips the whole thesis on its axis: Shitโ€™s fucked, no doubt about it, but what if we persevere?

About this, Thorburn says: โ€œI love the writing of Kim Stanley Robinson and the future he imagines for us. Itโ€™s tough, but itโ€™s not a cheap dystopia. We have to work hard at making the world a better place. Itโ€™s about overcoming the obstacles and going about things the hard way, towards a graceful resolution. And not alone either. The idea is joining others in going up the down staircase. In this way, the record contains a political undercurrent. To me, itโ€™s a warning sign, signaling the death of isolationism. If we can persevere as a collective, we can turn things around before itโ€™s too late. Iโ€™m interested in that.โ€

And persevering is exactly what Islands seems to be doing.

Fat Tony Lead Photo #1 20210521 NPH400 082

Fat Tony

No artist personifies the DIY culture of both underground hip-hop and Houston as perfectly as Fat Tony, the Third Ward-born musician who stormed through the indie-rap gates more than a decade ago. Through years of writing and performing amid the hip-hop scene of the fourth-largest city in the country, the man known as Anthony Obi has graced stages with the intent to always honor his inspirations, musical or otherwise. Heโ€™s found himself as an artist among the likes of fellow Houstonians who mix inward-looking pathos with storytelling and a swagger all their ownโ€”from Devin the Dude to Scarfaceโ€”as well as like-minded iconoclasts from other genres such as Prince. 

Fat Tony has emitted vital dispatches from his hometown to the world since he was able to pick up the mic and pass out CD-Rs and post links on MySpace in high school. Following a slew of independent releases, his 2013 record, Smart Ass Black Boy, introduced Tonyโ€™s singular voice to a national audience. A voice that was introspective but slyly humorous, keen to recording barnburners about house parties inside gentrifying neighborhoods on the same piece of wax as an ode to the tough love doled out by his immigrant father. 
The winding road heโ€™s traveled in his career reflects the range of his visionโ€” an artist captivated by the spirit of punk rock and hardcore music, eager to put his on for his hometown as much as decamp to New York, Los Angeles, or Mexico City for inspiration. Heโ€™s always been deeply interested in human connections, whether as guest lecturer at a contemporary arts museum, editor of a self-published zine focused on artists of color, or co-host of a talk show on Vice. Along the way heโ€™s collaborated with such key figures as Bun B, A$AP Rocky, and Maxo Kream, fronted a noise-rock duo, and picked up accolades from every Texas-based publication imaginable, as well as national outlets including Rolling Stone, Pitchfork, and The Fader. 

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