The Smith Street Band
Throw Me in the River


5.0
classic

Review

by anat CONTRIBUTOR (31 Reviews)
March 3rd, 2016 | 33 replies


Release Date: 2014 | Tracklist

Review Summary: Laden with uncertain ecstasy and the compromises of un-fucked-with dreams

Wil Wagner and company are doing okay. It’s a relative term, of course; their version of equilibrium might be past the tipping point of saner men, but consider that they’ve managed to rally a troop of diligent fans, many homegrown and more from the other halves of the globe – it’s likely an over-fulfilment of any success envisioned underneath Melbourne skies. Now they have the unique (at least in the grand scheme of things) privilege of being able to visit various locations around the world, alternate-dimension local watering holes where strangers know not only their names but their struggles. Throw Me In The River is the fruit of their labour, laden with uncertain ecstasy and the compromises of un-fucked-with dreams.

It was against all odds that they flew their coop, if a little all-thumbs. The following they’ve accrued stems from the bite of barefaced authenticity, a refusal to sugar-coat any of their skeletally candid recollections – ordinarily as a band gets bigger, so does the disconnect between them and their fans, and it should be especially true of Wagner’s home-grown maladies earning him bar-room billings in major cities and thousands of devotees even further afield. But, somehow, this still feels like the Smith Street Band’s realest record. Through all the mire and the shitstorm, I find myself living vicariously through the poetic genuineness of these situations – to share the emotional dexterity and the adrenaline of heated skirmishes, even as an observer, amps up my own dealings with what it is to be human. These songs strike a chord in a sense that’s much more earnest and personal than the ambiguities of “oh my god, it’s like this song was written just for me.”

Even better, then, that Wagner is so visibly aware of all the tropes and shortcomings associated with visceral, soul-bearing music. He’s built an effigy of himself to shout at, scratch up and belittle, if only so that he can then practice nurturing it in the same way he craves. “I speak in the tired clichés of a strip club DJ” he admits on ‘The Arrogance Of The Drunk Pedestrian‘, knowing which phrases and put-ons are most likely to amass a heaving audience. It’s inevitable that as Throw Me In The River trickles from source to mouth, sweaty gig-goers will begin tearing their throats shouting “So why don’t you fuck off!” back at Wil. It’s the sort of exclamation that we all have a mutual affinity for, but nestled among the smithed lyricism it doesn’t feel like pandering. We’ve been let in on the act.

It almost seems necessary on his part, too. Obsessive as music fans can get, we often magnify the worth of our music library deities, and much of the album feels like a reminder that Wagner isn't much more than a shitty, undependable human wading through the trial and error of life – and he’s turning us, the waddling wind-up toys, around so that we don’t topple off the edge of the table. “I’m just trying to pay an insurmountable debt, just trying to forget about my inevitable death,” he begins ‘Surrey Dive‘, reducing his troubles to two of humanity’s biggest bugbears with the moxie of a fearless youngster – “Chris threw up in the diner, and I was sick in the snow.” The agile bounce of the accompanying riff reeks of fingers-in-ears denial, sprightly and try-hard, a skinny-dipper who won’t be dissuaded from making the plunge.

But, vitally, this is a far cry from reckless abandon. For every doe-eyed witticism there’s a sobering, shivering disclosure, as the pitfalls of relentless travelling reveal themselves like scorned children from behind a door frame. In ‘Surrender‘, he reasons that “we should be climbing chain link fences, with backpacks, and nowhere to go”, but the allure of intrepid exploration has faded by the time he belts “alcohol and time differences, they never got along” in ‘Get High, See No One‘. It’s not the only changing of his mind either; more obliquely, a quivering yell imparts “when I said I wanted to die, I meant it” – later, and still with a quiver, he jams his foot in the door to iterate that “leaving isn’t what I came here for.”

More than just an insane catalogue of quotables, Throw Me In The River brandishes remarkable, revitalised musicianship. These excerpts of pleasant, rhythmic prose are naught but waifs and strays without the ecosystem of the instrumentals to house them – all of the instruments share Wagner’s personality, laughing when he laughs, shattering when he buckles. Conversely, some of the song structures seem to have been designed by the course of nature, dips and deluges taking precedence over template anthems. ‘Calgary Girls‘ ends up dropping below the waterline, muffling the noise of unanswered affection into a nearly-spoken soliloquy: “If you see me again holding up some dive bar’s end, with a whiskey sat far too naturally between my legs, will you saunter over smokily and tell me about your family, and I’ll tell you you were right when you said I’d end up lonely.” And then it surges like over-saturated earth, no longer able to take the strain of Wagner’s strife. The conflicts are quantified and made tangible, pressed like flowers into the stained pages of a worn diary, and that’s perfect – because as we’re told at either end of Throw Me In The River, regardless of life’s trials, all Wil Wagner ever needed was something he could hold in his hands.



Recent reviews by this author
Gumshoes CacophonyPunching Swans GAMESHOW
Haruomi Hosono PhilharmonyArab Strap As Days Get Dark
Hayden Thorpe DivinerHaruomi Hosono Hochono House
user ratings (422)
4.1
excellent
other reviews of this album
Brad (5)
Maturity and continued excellence...

VengeanceCactus (4.5)
All we ever really wanted was to feel at home....

UnstableConnection1 (4.5)
The Smith Street Band has made it clear they don’t want the world, but the world is slowly finding...

Mrs. Pain~~ (4.5)
All I ever needed was something I could hold in my hands....



Comments:Add a Comment 
anat
Contributing Reviewer
March 3rd 2016


5742 Comments

Album Rating: 4.5

Originally posted on Noted Music: http://notedmusic.co.uk/2014/11/12/spotlight-the-smith-street-band-throw-me-in-the-river/

I know I'm preaching to the choir with this one but I'm pleased with what I wrote for it over a year ago, so here you are.

porcupinetheater
March 3rd 2016


11025 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0

"Throw me in the river, drop me in the water

Throw me in the river, dip me in the water"



Mmhm sweet jams

TumsFestival
March 3rd 2016


2470 Comments


whiplash is a good film

Atari
Staff Reviewer
March 3rd 2016


27945 Comments

Album Rating: 5.0

commented to remind me to read later, no such thing as too much smith street band on the front page

Trebor.
Emeritus
March 4th 2016


59810 Comments

Album Rating: 4.8

I DON'T GET ANYTHING FROM ANYTHING ANYMORE

I DON'T LOVE ANYONE ANYMORE

anat
Contributing Reviewer
March 4th 2016


5742 Comments

Album Rating: 4.5

I know I fucked up and I know I done wrong

And that you deserve more than another fucking song

Atari
Staff Reviewer
March 4th 2016


27945 Comments

Album Rating: 5.0

EVERYONE IN THIS SHITTY BAR IS JUST TRYING TO SINK THEIR TEETH INTO EVERYBODY ELSE



GIVE ME EAST LONDON SUMMER, GIVE ME NORTH MELBOURNE SUMMMMAAAHHHHH

DoofusWainwright
March 4th 2016


19991 Comments

Album Rating: 2.5

Another excellent review, the snippets of lyrics definitely make this sound like it'll be my sort of thing.

Atari
Staff Reviewer
March 4th 2016


27945 Comments

Album Rating: 5.0

Just read the review and really enjoyed it, nicely done



"We've been let in on the act"



Couldn't agree more with this line. There's something about their music that makes you feel deeply connected with it

TumsFestival
March 4th 2016


2470 Comments


this and Knife Man by AJJ have the most positive reviews on this site i swear

torts
March 4th 2016


4298 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0

comes with the audience that the bands pander to, all of their fans are so desperate for anything "punk" and when they find it they'll hype it into the atmosphere

torts
March 4th 2016


4298 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0

albums still good, reviews still good

TumsFestival
March 4th 2016


2470 Comments


both are probably both of the bands' best work

torts
March 4th 2016


4298 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0

people who eat people tho

TumsFestival
March 4th 2016


2470 Comments


people who eat has higher highs than knife man but knife man is wayy more consistent

DoofusWainwright
March 4th 2016


19991 Comments

Album Rating: 2.5

This has the same effect on me as 'David Comes to Life' by Fucked Up, it's impressive but I just find it overwhelming, too unrefined shouty and in yer face for my palette.



I totally get the appeal nonetheless, just not for me

Piglet
March 4th 2016


8473 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0

giv me north MELBUUUARUAEARN



SUMMMM -- MMMAAHHHH

[bluhbluhriff]



anat
Contributing Reviewer
March 4th 2016


5742 Comments

Album Rating: 4.5

Thanks for the pos's.



David Comes To Life is an exhausting listen for me, but I can return to this album all the time.

DoofusWainwright
March 4th 2016


19991 Comments

Album Rating: 2.5

I can tell this is good stuff, I'll maybe just download a couple of songs first instead of trying to listen to it front to back in the one sitting.

Piglet
March 4th 2016


8473 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0

well ey doofus if it means anything, for years i listened to this band intermittently but never could get into them -- bit shouty, bit raw and not much else were my impressions -- but i don't know something just clicks after a while, hope the same goes for you!



You have to be logged in to post a comment. Login | Create a Profile





STAFF & CONTRIBUTORS // CONTACT US

Bands: A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z


Site Copyright 2005-2023 Sputnikmusic.com
All Album Reviews Displayed With Permission of Authors | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy