Setting aside the grand orchestrations of
Smokey Rolls Down Thunder Canyon,
Devendra Banhart's
What Will We Be is everything its predecessor was not: straight-forward, cleanly produced, consistently laid-back (to nearly
Jack Johnson proportions), and free of ambition.
Banhart enlists the same band as last time (
Noah Georgeson,
Greg Rogove,
Luckey Remington, and
Rodrigo Amarante), but hired production whiz
Paul Butler, whose records with
A Band of Bees are some of the most striking productions of the 2000s. The double-tracked vocals give the album the same air as
Banhart's early four-track experiments, but there's no haunted quality, just an occasional hippie-dippie aside in his delivery. Recorded in Northern California,
What Will We Be often has the same slacker sensibilities and scent of ocean breeze that
Jack Johnson has made his name with (read: funky white-bread basslines and closely miked drums played with plenty of whisk).
Banhart's persona emerges intact despite the mainstream sound, however, and
What Will We Be becomes a pleasantly fresh album to follow the ponderous, sprawling
Smokey Rolls Down Thunder Canyon. ~ John Bush