Produced by
16 Horsepower's
Bob Ferbache,
DeVotchKa's debut,
Supermelodrama, shows a band filled with vigor and paranoia, but with a much distilled and prominent vision. At their most dark and forceful,
DeVotchKa sit somewhere between the nervous
Radiohead and the most melodic of
Talking Heads, due to vocalist
Nick Urata's vocal likeness to
Thom Yorke and
David Byrne, but the band is much more than these influences. To mix it up,
DeVotchKa mix regular references to European folk, hints of sunny pop melodies, and angular post-punk ruminations via a mesh of clarinet, accordion, sousaphone, trumpet, percussion, and violin falling over the staggering peaks of the traditional rock & roll bed of guitar, bass, and drums. "Danglin' Feet" leads the album off with the opening bars joyously capturing a vibe similar to the irresistible charm of
Joe Meek's classic "Telstar," but the likeness ends when
Urata's fevered vocals take over and terrorize the listener through the plans of a suicide. It is followed by the furious and engaging theme song for the band, an intoxicating, Slavic gypsy-sounding melody reaching similar territory in cadence and vitality as the amazing
Taraf de Haïdouks often do, and this is what the band is all about. In the first five minutes of
Supermelodrama,
DeVotchKa travel around the globe without knowledge of or care for the boundaries that have separated popular cultures for centuries, and furthermore do it without sounding choppy or forced. This is the same approach
George Harrison took when molding the sitar into
John Lennon's "Norwegian Wood (This Bird Has Flown)" and fills a very interesting distinction of rock which, surprisingly, has been visited by very few since. At the roots of the clever arrangements, it is nice to find
DeVotchKa's songwriting is just as realized and appealing as their sound, and moreover is surprisingly accessible which makes the fact that
Supermelodrama is the group's debut all the more impressive.