A creative, psychedelic, math rock freak-out, filled to the rim with microtonal sounds,
Zach Hill's
Astrological Straits incorporates a huge roster of indie rock's elite (
Marnie Stern,
Primus'
Les Claypool,
No Age's two members
Randy Randall and
Dean Spunt,
Deftones'
Chino Moreno, and Marco Benevento,
Zach's
Hella bandmates
Josh Hill and
Carson McWhirter,
Zach's former
Hella bandmate
Jonathan Hischke, the
Advantage's
Robby Moncrieff, and
!!!/
LCD Soundsystem's
Tyler Pope are all onboard). Playing like a more frantic version of
Battles'
Mirrored or an even more unfocused version of
Marnie Stern's
This Is It and I Am It and You Are It and So Is That and He Is It (which
Hill also drummed on),
Hill's first solo album for Ipecac is a messy extravaganza that is, depending on who you ask, either extremely cerebral or painstakingly difficult. Glitch blasts and synth blips accent extreme drumming to make an abstract mess, splattered with a few sparing musical hooks. Guitar, bass, horns, synth, odd samples, and other indistinguishable sounds all blend together under a monolith of compression provided by producer/engineer
John Reed Thompson, who assisted
Hill in his musical deconstruction, mangling vocals through effects units and digitally mutating them into alien mutterings. If anything survived the sonic warfare, it's the outrageous flourish of drum fills. Simply put,
Hill is freakin' fast. "Toll Road" has the bombastic BPM of a drum'n'bass track, sliced, diced, and served up at a rate that might make you wonder if he has a third or fourth arm (there's a reason that music journalists often compare him to an octopus). But, as well as being a résumé builder to show off his technical skill behind a kit,
Astrological Straits is much more than a typical shredding virtuoso record. It's cerebral and futuristic. It's his wildest outing, but also his most accomplished achievement to date. [The bonus disc is a sprawling half-hour drum'n'piano free jazz odyssey, with Marco Benevento of the
Benevento/Russo Duo pounding the keys: it's too exhausting to be tolerable. There's really no need for its inclusion; the wealth of material to sift through on disc one should be more than enough.]