
9
In Pondâs universe nothing stays still for long. Although no one who heard 2019âs âTasmaniaâ could possibly describe its pulsating psych-pop as straight, Pond wanted to try a more spontaneous way of working for their next record. Taking a leaf out of krautrock outliers Canâs book, at the start of 2020, Pond embarked on a series of totally off-the-cuff jam sessions from which songs and ideas could be pulled out.
Given the pace at which ideas whizz past your head, it makes for a dizzying listen. Opener Song For Agnes explodes out the speakers like an intergalactic rock opera, running a synapse-tingling gauntlet through bubbling synth pop, 80s hair metal and blissed out saxophone before you know whatâs hit you. Itâs an opposite curtain-raiser for an album that can encompass pounding techno (Human Touch), elastic hipped robo-funk (Americaâs Cup), tripped out motorik (Czech Locomotive) and acres more besides without even topping for breath.
Take lead single Pink Lunettes, which opens up thumping like ESG eight hours into a session at Berghain before climbing aboard a gargantuan synthship and disappearing off over the horizon. Lyrically, too, 9 takes Pond into uncharted territory. Allbrookâs songs here take a more impressionistic tack than before, resulting in both the hilarious one-liners within Human Touchâs gonzoid thrash (sample lyric: âshe was jacking a car but she seemed quite nice so I let her use the toilet in my placeâ) and the social and environmental concerns of blissed out closer Toast, which addressed both last yearâs bush fires and the appalling wealth divide in Allbrookâs childhood home in Western Australia.
Above all though, what you get from â9â is a sense of creative abandon and just plain fun. If it was only a fraction as enjoyable to make as it is to listen to then they must have been having a hoot.
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Description
In Pondâs universe nothing stays still for long. Although no one who heard 2019âs âTasmaniaâ could possibly describe its pulsating psych-pop as straight, Pond wanted to try a more spontaneous way of working for their next record. Taking a leaf out of krautrock outliers Canâs book, at the start of 2020, Pond embarked on a series of totally off-the-cuff jam sessions from which songs and ideas could be pulled out.
Given the pace at which ideas whizz past your head, it makes for a dizzying listen. Opener Song For Agnes explodes out the speakers like an intergalactic rock opera, running a synapse-tingling gauntlet through bubbling synth pop, 80s hair metal and blissed out saxophone before you know whatâs hit you. Itâs an opposite curtain-raiser for an album that can encompass pounding techno (Human Touch), elastic hipped robo-funk (Americaâs Cup), tripped out motorik (Czech Locomotive) and acres more besides without even topping for breath.
Take lead single Pink Lunettes, which opens up thumping like ESG eight hours into a session at Berghain before climbing aboard a gargantuan synthship and disappearing off over the horizon. Lyrically, too, 9 takes Pond into uncharted territory. Allbrookâs songs here take a more impressionistic tack than before, resulting in both the hilarious one-liners within Human Touchâs gonzoid thrash (sample lyric: âshe was jacking a car but she seemed quite nice so I let her use the toilet in my placeâ) and the social and environmental concerns of blissed out closer Toast, which addressed both last yearâs bush fires and the appalling wealth divide in Allbrookâs childhood home in Western Australia.
Above all though, what you get from â9â is a sense of creative abandon and just plain fun. If it was only a fraction as enjoyable to make as it is to listen to then they must have been having a hoot.

















