SAIGON BLUE RAIN
"What I Don't See"
"What I don't see" is the debut full-length album by the French duo Saigon Blue Rain (formerly known as Stupid Bitch Reject) and, as its title already implies, it somehow serves well as a soundtrack to the feeling that every intangible thing around - and even within us - is meaningful, wether it's sublime or miserable. Such is the emotional grandeur with which Ophélie and Franck have impregnated these ten songs. Building on classical New Wave foundations and touching it with Coldwave and Ethereal rapture triggers, they manage to lead us into a ghostly - although comforting, almost womb-like - plain whose virtual horizons succeed each other like on-screen slides of longing, beauty, gloom, Nature's mysteries and even joy. This focus can be sensed straight from the starting seconds of the album's opener, "Queen Ephemeria", during which some bright chimes of guitar knock around in an empty void, and then Ophélie's airy, enchanting vocals permeate all, becoming hypnotic in coalition with the down-tempo drum beats and the silky picks of bass. It somehow sounds to me like a collaborative cover version of a Cocteau Twin's classic, made by members of The Cure and The Eden House while exuding the glacially esoteric charm that sets Saigon Blue Rain apart. "So Cold" is soared to exotic dyzzing heights too but, this time, it happens gradually, like catalysed by the Kashmir-like magic sound of the strings, the deep pounding of the drum thuds and the soulful, floating female vocals. Though, there is a profound melancholy lying underneath its iridiscent surface - where some (duly frosted) reminiscences of All About Eve can be found - which reveals itself in all its bitterness over the third minute. Exactly then guitars ring dreamy, mournful tunes with early The Mission allure and, following that, some dissonant, deathly keyboard chords make the ambient temperature drop far below zero. This flawless, steady repetition of melody and rhythm for the sake of a progressive emotional build is definitely another strength of Saigon Blue Rain. Just pick up the irresistible closer, "L'Offrande", and let yourself drift away from this shore to the 'other', swaying in bouncy and wiry pluckings through a thick fog of harmonies and siren calls. I have no compunction about using the term 'overwhelming' to describe this song. However, this record is not monolithic at all and, apart from other evoking mind-stickers such as the partially shoegazed "Borealis" and "Lovelorns", or the hauntingly machined reverie that "Break the Disease" is, you can also find sleek shakers like the title track, "What I don't see", which is an ingenious mix of hooky flanger tones and resonant cold bass with expertly paced, synthed out grooves and swirls - being its borders blurred by the addictive singing - or "Beyond the Stone", where every worthy wave sound devised during the 80's seem to be covered, even though resulting wholly-owned and modern. So there is no waste in this album and, more important, with credentials like these Saigon Blue Rain leave clear that they're not a promise as to the future, but an unequivocal declaration as to the present. When listening to "What I don't see" you'll trip in a continuum to your own core stuff, pleasantly stoned by its virgin melodies and icy rhythms. In short, this record is such impressive as if you close your eyes while standing alone at the end of a breakwater.
Review by Billyphobia
- 01. Queen Ephemeria
- 02. So Cold
- 03. Corps Astral
- 04. Borealis
- 05. I Wanna Be You
- 06. What I Don't See
- 07. Beyond The Stone
- 08. Break The Disease
- 09. Lovelorn
- 10. L'Offrande