toe
The Book About My Idle Plot on a Vague Anxiety


3.5
great

Review

by MassiveAttack USER (91 Reviews)
January 30th, 2010 | 79 replies


Release Date: 2005 | Tracklist

Review Summary: Another Japanese post-rock esque group worth watching, and they don't carry a hefty load of meaningless, sometimes uninspired buildups as some of their present contemporaries.

The Japanese group Toe when releasing their debut The Book About My Idle Plot on a Vague Anxiety must have come to conclusion to release something dynamic and free. While at heart their debut is a calming, melodic post-rock affair, it adds interesting stop and go rhythm sections within the bulk of some of the album, a clear math rock influence. What is telling about Toe's work on this album is their clear potential to become more. Their dynamic, yet limited buildups aren't the ones you hear from traditional, uproarious, and grandiose groups like Explosions In The Sky! or more traditionally Godspeed You! Black Emperor; instead their clean shaven take on guitar structure and fantastic drumming by Kashikura Takashi is what matters the most. Rarely, if ever are piano structures, obscure samples, or electronics of any kind are introduced within The Book About My Idle Plot on a Vague Anxiety, which frankly is impressive.

The Book About My Idle Plot on a Vague Anxiety is at its core a strict representation of a minimalist post-rock affair. Its structures carry on by themselves without a huge ambient uplifting or pretentious, high-flying strings to back up any track. The album moves smoothly as it should, but Takashi's skill is exceptional, he carries this album with his smooth, diverse drumming. Amazingly it doesn't tire at all. Stylishly the band approaches an almost back-and-forth method between the rhythm portion of the album and its percussion - at times silencing out one to showcase the other, as seen in "Past and Language". The album moves freely without hesitation or uncertainty, making the music so effective, but the parts not whole is really only needed as the structures don't need to be completely built up in an awe-inspiring 10-20 minute epic, but a melodic, serene, more or less peaceful 5 minutes of them almost jamming. Oddly enough this perception of them in a free-form basis of jamming is clearly not a reality because the rhythm structures and percussion fills are exceptional at their timings all over this debut.

The biggest strength of this Toe's debut is their patience within these tracks. Unlike other short, quick outbursts such as Grails, Toe still find themselves building the song suitable to their strengths and comfort zone. When they decide to trek outside of these waters, they're very minimal, in an experimented quick duration as seen in "Music For You" and "反逆する風景". When the group decides to ramp up a song, they do so immediately from the inner-workings of Takashi and by doing so carve out a quick, tasteful foundation to start off on, evidence by "I Still Do Wrong". While their stripped-down approach that feels almost too pure for most post-rock listeners, they seem to take their strides from Do Make Say Think and their label associates Mouse On The Keys and Enemies. What The Book About My Idle Plot on a Vague Anxiety accomplishes is a rhythm section that is entirely tight and sustained, that at times should feel timid or stale, but the drumming is frankly superb, allowing the band to reach new heights. The prime detriment that can be attributed to this is by far the lack of vibrancy within the material. Sure it's consistent, but it seems a bit hollow in small sections, which can only be the major setback with their debut.



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user ratings (380)
4.1
excellent

Comments:Add a Comment 
americanmusicmachine
January 30th 2010


3953 Comments


good one, but you got your exclamation points all screwy in the 1st paragragh. and I may check this out.

MassiveAttack
January 30th 2010


2754 Comments

Album Rating: 3.5

Those are the band names, not the sentence structure =).

SnackaryBinx
January 30th 2010


2309 Comments


their new album is definitely their best. probably somewhere in the 5 range for me.

MassiveAttack
January 30th 2010


2754 Comments

Album Rating: 3.5

I'm listening to that now and I'll be doin' a review of it soon.

Metalstyles
February 1st 2010


8576 Comments


nice review, not my cup of music

MassiveAttack
February 1st 2010


2754 Comments

Album Rating: 3.5

Hmmm.. cup of music new term? :]

Metalstyles
February 1st 2010


8576 Comments


yeah man

MassiveAttack
February 2nd 2010


2754 Comments

Album Rating: 3.5

You're just full of surprises.

BLUEOmni
March 5th 2012


735 Comments

Album Rating: 4.5

fufufu

DoubtGin
June 25th 2012


6879 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0

mmhhh the drummer

666Micrograms
January 26th 2013


923 Comments

Album Rating: 3.5

ya some of the best drumming ever. this albums jonesin'

titlefightmeirl
July 14th 2013


659 Comments


who else ordered this on vinyl? : )

amanwithahammer
February 20th 2014


585 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0

I've come to realise that toe are one of the most perfect bands in the world, this could be a 5

CosmicPie
April 25th 2014


2901 Comments

Album Rating: 5.0

Well, Tashaki is one of the greatest drummers on the planet. Really, it's amazing.

instantradical
May 24th 2014


351 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0

This is a great album but it makes no sense to compare it to post-rock groups, it's basically an all-instrumental version of American Football.

StallionMang
May 24th 2014


9003 Comments

Album Rating: 3.5

Way more math than post-rock

treeqt.
May 24th 2014


16970 Comments


american football is a post-rock group so what's your point

lensag
May 24th 2014


93 Comments


haven t listened to this for ages. this album is amazing

StallionMang
May 24th 2014


9003 Comments

Album Rating: 3.5

Btw if you like this album you should check this out:



http://catune.bandcamp.com/album/mirror-on-then-in

amanwithahammer
September 18th 2014


585 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0

Yeah it's so stupid when people call bands like toe post-rock or even relate them to that genre at all. Instrumental rock doesn't necessarily mean post-rock. It's even more dumb when the label is applied to artists like Stars of the Lid and World's End Girlfriend



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