INK 19
http://ink19.com/issues/january2006/musicReviews/musicC/citay.html
Citay
Citay
Important
Citay is the freak-folk brainchild of former Piano Magic member Ezra Feinberg.
Named after the historically over-enunciated/sung word "city,
"Feinberg's outfit -- including Fucking Champs' Tim Green -- opts for a
mostly instrumental project. Lyrics do appear from time to time, but
always in the hazy glow of reverb and chorus saturation.
Apparently, Feinberg's inspiration for this project was the mysticism and pagan
folk moments in early hard rock and the fact that these quiet
interludes had yet to be extrapolated into a full-length album. His arrangements
work surprisingly well, without the promise of bombast. He
keeps the guitars sweetly-harmonized and double-tracked and adds appropriate
doses of rustic sounding garnish in the form of mandolins,
glockenspiel, etc. throughout, keeping a tight rein on the melodies. Where the
disc stalls is when Feinberg gives into the old notion that eastern
instruments automatically equals psychedelica. Synthesized or not, sitars are
as tired a rock trope as a musician can muster. Citay's best moments
come on "Sticks" and "What Never Was and What Should Have Been,"
where the imported sounds are kept outside the border and the home-grown
folk is allowed to flourish. It's more Heart than Led Zeppelin, and with the
amount of traffic on Zeppelin's trail of influence, it's nice to hear reverence
paid to the Wilson sisters. As abstract as it is rewarding and unexpected, Citay
could act as the missing link on many a rock evolution chart.
Not bad for a debut album...
(note: there are no sitars syntheszied or not on this album! -Important)