Connan Mockasin

Caramel

2013-11-21

New Zealand has its very own Ariel Pink. Connan Mockasin, a mop-topped blonde "pop sprite" - who broke onto the scene with his first solo effort, 2010's Forever Dolphin Love - is the newest sensation in the world of weirdo psyche-funk. With Caramel, Mockasin comes across as a bizarrely seductive figure, each song oozing with undeniably sexy grooves and his accompanying voice that croons or growls, depending on the context. The fact that the album was self-recorded within a month's span in a Tokyo hotel room makes too much sense.

The record's middle stretch is a five part opus called "It's Your Body." It ebbs and flows, mostly encompassing the shimmering, soulful vibe found on the majority of the tracks, but on part three devolves into grinding, mutated guitar pitch bends that sound like a chainsaw run through a synthesizer. On part four and five, it slips back into the pristine, crisp white sheets covering Connan's hotel bed in the neon flower of Tokyo. Luckily, the inner space explored on Caramel is unique and arrestingly pretty enough to not come off as kitschy or sleazy. The tracks are slow burns, building upon slinky guitars dancing through thick soundscapes saturated with R&B sensibilities. With the help of Mockasin's falsetto and whispers, Caramel feels like an intimate, reconstructed funk album. And yeah, it totally does sound like caramel.

Recommended Tracks: #3 "I'm The Man, That Will Find You", #11 "I Wanna Roll With You"

Sigmund Steiger

Quick Links:

More reviews tagged #Rock

  • reviewed 06/2011

    JANITA
    Haunted

  • reviewed 10/2015

    The Plurals
    An Onion Tied To My Belt

  • reviewed 06/2010

    PAUL WELLER
    Wake Up the Nation

  • reviewed 10/2006

    The Dears
    Gang Of Losers

  • reviewed 06/2009

    STARDEATH AND WHITE DWARFS
    The Birth

  • reviewed 03/2008

    Nick Lowe
    Jesus of Cool (reissue)

Compiled by the WYCE Journalism Club

The opinions expressed in these reviews are those of the individual volunteers that submitted the article and do not necessarily reflect the views of WYCE or GRCMC; nor its staff, donors, or affiliates.