There is loud music, and then there is music to be heard loud. Folie à Deux, the noisy new album from pop-punksters Fall Out Boy, with its red-lining zeal, is of the former. Just thinking about that racket causes my eardrums to stick their fingers in their own ears. I'd sooner sit along side a megaphone-equipped Al Pacino at a monster-car rally than to subject myself to Fall Out Boy, who have it all over howitzers and Rush Limbaugh.
This isn't to say I ignore my home stereo's upper reaches. Radiohead makes gorgeously huge sounds, the Black Keys roar wonderfully, and for the most delicate moments of Pink Floyd's Wish You Were Here album, the more volume the better.
Loud music is to big music as a fire hose is to a thundering waterfall.
Bruce Peninsula, a sprawling Toronto freak folk choir, makes uplifting, ruggedly expansive sounds. These gut-singers wouldn't know a Marshall amplifier from a Marcia Brady, yet their songs fill canyons. A Mountain Is a Mouth begins with Inside/Outside's shimmering vocals and percussion. "Guess you don't have to go out if you really don't wanna (go out), but you could use a walk, and lift those shoulders up too" is the opening line, accompanied by a pinging vibraphone. It's a hell of an ushering that gives way to a clattering, stomping rhythm and the growling lead call of Neil Haverty with backing response vocals that mark most of the album.
Elements of Malian blues (on Shanty Song), European folk and gospel structures are detected on eight originals and two traditionals from an expandable 12-piece that probably counts the members of Ottawa's indie world-folksters the Acorn as fellow travellers.
As you would imagine from an ensemble that names itself after a national park, the material is environmentally concerned (and often water-themed). The hand-clapped, chanted Steamroller, for example, deals with urban sprawl.
Shutters, the stunning, soul-swelling centrepiece, imagines Jim Morrison with the Fifth Dimension. Crabapples, with its rough-cut preaching and marched beat, would blow Alan Lomax's mind. The more serene singing of the riveting Misha Bower offers a respite on two other numbers.
I like the contrast of Haverty's gravelly singing and the shout-y choir behind him, but his gruff delivery makes some of the lyrics indiscernible. On 2nd 4th World War, though, the voice is clear. "When that flood comes, it comes as a cannon, one that lets you catch the shot in your hands/ but just to send its shocking tidal wave through every bone in your body." Yeah, I got that, in a very big, bowled-over way.
A Mountain Is a Mouth is currently available digitally at zunior.com, with a physical release set for Feb. 3. CD launch shows include Ottawa, Feb. 6; Montreal Feb. 7; and Toronto, Feb. 22.