Listen: "RPG 3" from the album 'The Same and The Other'
...they call to mind the Minutemen in a lot of ways.
In fact, they may be what the Minutemen would be like if they’d been an
instrumental band. It isn’t necessarily that Ahleuchatistas sound like
the Minutemen, because they don’t, really. But, like the Minutemen,
they don’t sound like anyone else. And while Ahleuchatistas could be
grouped in with punk or with metal or with some sort of avant-jazz,
they aren’t exactly any of those things. They are simply a tight
three-piece making their own noise and cranking out great albums nearly
every year.
The most refreshing thing about this band is that they sound
political. Their name—derived from a particularly aggressive Charlie
Parker number—is as difficult to get a handle on as their music is.
But, unlike so many artists labeled “difficult”, the band isn’t
excluding us. They want us in the fray with them, to figure out the
chaos of sound surrounding us, and to get lost in it. “...Of All This”
starts with some off-kilter guitar that moves back and forth between
bent off-tune notes and a quick surf-rock riff before the drums and
bass kick in and the band hits breakneck speed. The bass rises and
falls and the drums drive the bus along. It builds to a crescendo of
guitar chords and cymbals, and the band sounds larger than it has on
any of its previous records. And then the bottom drops out of the song.
Just like that. Drums crash and the guitar slaps out haphazard notes.
And then the whole cycle starts over again, with the chugging drums,
the quick-strike guitar.
Their formula seems to be that they don’t have one, and that is what
keeps this all so surprising. They maintain an energy throughout
...Even in the Midst that is truly astounding, and their ability to
turn on a dime, switching time-signature and pace two and three times
in a song without blinking, makes even the longest entries on this
record seem fresh from moment to moment. Perhaps the most deceptive
thing the band does is appear disheveled. The way their songs crumble
into awkward drum fills and buzzing bass notes might sound, to the
casual listener, like a deconstructionist mess. But, if you listen
close, you can hear one of the instruments—and not always the same
one—keeping the thread going.
And while their song titles, particularly “Take Me to Your Leader
Never Sounded So Alien”, are not terribly subtle, the way they approach
politics is. Taking a cue from their hero Charlie Parker, they make
music that represents a frustration both germane to our times and
tragically timeless. Much of ['...Even in the Midst'] sounds like the soundtrack to a
tense chase scene. The trouble is that we’re the ones being chased, and
we can’t see exactly what is creeping up behind us. Ahleuchatistas do
not make the mistake, like so many artists do, of claiming to have the
answers. Instead, they illuminate institutional problems by
transmogrifying the frustration and confusion and anger and exhaustion
that the individual can feel in a world divided into music as jarring
and brash as it is controlled and unified, as minimalist as it is
intricate.
The band closes the record with “Where We Left Off”, and the distant
bass and fading drums make the band sound worn out. As guitar notes run
backwards and the song starts to peter out, however, a looping feedback
rises up, and while the song never comes to a full peak, it gives off a
feeling that shakes off defeatism in favor of something more urgent.
The band sounds, as the record ends, like they’re ready to start right
back up again. There’s tension all throughout '...Even in the Midst', as
the band takes on something bigger and stronger than itself. But,
rather than letting themselves get beaten down by the uphill battle,
they are charging back up to start the protest all over again, urging
us to join in with them. -Pop Matters