During the six years between his second album, 2003’s Born Free Forever and his third, 2009’s
New Moods,
Bobby Birdman modeled, became a fixture of Los Angeles’ art, music, and fashion scenes, and released two EPs that moved his music in an electro-pop direction that became ubiquitous while he was working on other projects. Though
New Moods’ songs certainly owe something to the
Heart Caves and Giraffes & Jackals EPs’ synth pop, the album is more eclectic than that. Birdman reaches back to the more intimate sounds of Let Me In and Born Free Forever as well, bridging the different sides of his music in sometimes jarring but often appealing ways. While the opening track “Only for a While” is as bright and whimsical as anything off of
Heart Caves, “Well Sprung”’s brooding and “Weighty Weight”’s drifting acoustic guitar loops play like more stylized updates on his earlier work. Even the gloriously poppy “Setting Sun” has a certain melancholy that echoes the music he made prior to
Heart Caves. Birdman reunites that EP’s producer,
YACHT’s Jonah Bechtolt (in turn, Birdman appeared on
YACHT’s I Believe in You, Your Magic Is Real), on some of
New Moods’ more dance-oriented tracks. Bechtolt provides the “booster beat” on the winningly spare “Dust-Design,” but funkier attempts like “Bloody Mess” feel a bit forced in comparison. Birdman is still in his element on deceptively simple pop songs that play like they were written by a less cynical
Magnetic Fields and produced by the
Neptunes. His retro croon is all the smoother when juxtaposed with “Victory at Sea”’s clattering rhythms, while the bouncing ball bassline on “You’d Be Surprised” adds some vintage charm to the rest of the song’s sleek machinery. Given that this is the first time Birdman has tried to put all of the kinds of music he makes together on one album, some of
New Moods’ sonic and emotional swings seem scattered at first. After a few listens, though, the album reveals its ambitious charm, and fans of
YACHT and other likeminded groups who aren’t familiar with Birdman’s work will find this a pleasant discovery. ~ Heather Phares