The Claypool Lennon Delirium: Monolith of Phobos
The Claypool Lennon Delirium
Monolith of Phobos
(ATO Records)
If youâre a fan of Les Claypool, then there are two things you know about him: 1) He has one of the most distinct and recognizable bass sounds of anyone whoâs ever played the instrument and 2) All of his projects kind of sound alike. He brings this double-edged sword to his new collaboration with Sean Lennon. When Lennon is singing, the songs sound like the work of a truly collaborative project. Theyâre spacey and psychedelic with heavy bass that stands out but doesnât get in the way. âCricket and the Genie (Movement I, The Delirium)â is a jaw-dropping tune that brings to mind Barrett-era Pink Floyd. That rubbery bass tone is there, but it sits beside fuzzy guitar and organ while Claypoolâs backing vocals generally enhance this song without shouting, âLook at me!â âBubbles Burstâ is a trippy, prog ballad thatâs beautiful as well as weird and manages to evoke Lennonâs Dadâs band without being too blatant. When Claypool is singing it basically sounds like Primus. âCaptain Lariatâ easily couldâve been on their next album, or their last one. Lennon tries to bring his own flavor and it mostly works. For instance, he strums acoustic guitar over Claypoolâs bass figure where Larry LaLonde probably would have choked out some extra-terrestrial sounds. But the songwriting is pure Les. Heâs the only living man who would attempt the line, âHave you seen Captain Lariat with his tattoo of Sean Penn?â
Donât get me wrong, the two make a surprisingly good team. Lennonâs psych-rock worship allows Claypool to play with sounds and techniques that his other bands wouldnât mess with and it sounds like both of them are having lots of fun. The collaborative potential is great and on a few songs they achieve something truly wonderful. I just wouldâve liked it if Les didnât dominate so much. Hopefully this doesnât turn out to be a one-off for them because they could get even deeper down the psychedelic rabbit hole next time and who knows what else the pair could come up with.