Rendezvous – Sean McCarthy

Rendezvous
Jetset Records, 2004
Reviewed by Sean McCarthy
Published on Nov 12, 2004

Fed up with having to answer the obvious “Why is your band
quitting” questions posed by journalists, Dean Wareham, founding
member of Luna, posted the following reasons on their web site at
www.fuzzywuzzy.com:

1. Rock and Roll is killing my life. 2. The Universe is
Expanding. 3. There are too many bands out there, travelling(sp)
around, singing their songs etc. 4. Too much time spent in
15-passenger vans. According to 20/20, these things flip over. 5.
Too many hands to shake, that means germs. 6. Too many dinners at
Wendy’s. 7. People are dying in Iraq. 8. This is what bands do
(with a few exceptions, like R.E.M. and Metallica, and the Rolling
Stones). Those bands, however, are multibillion dollar
corporations. You don’t break that up unless the government forces
you to. 9. Hotel Electravision. 10. Time to Quit.

Be it in Galaxy 500 or with Luna, Wareham’s sardonic sense of
humor has been a signature in his work. That sense of humor is
evident on
Rendezvous, Luna’s final release. Along with quirky, witty
one-liners,
Rendezvous contains the stoney, oftentimes jammy guitar
riffs by Wareham and Sean Eden that make Luna a perfect 2 a.m.
after hours soundtrack.

The first thing that needs to be said about
Rendezvous is that it’s a great improvement from
Romantica, which was inexplicably lauded by critics while
their 1999 album
The Days Of Our Nights received lukewarm reviews. Those
great, extended grooves that oftentimes drew comparisons to The
Velvet Underground are once again evident in tracks like “Malibu
Love Nest” and “Star Spangled Man.”

Though
Rendevous is the band’s final album, the overall chemistry
of the band doesn’t show any signs of animosity. Nor does the album
show any signs of urgency. It doesn’t have the “greatness” feel
that oozed from
Penthouse. The tunes take a few listens to sink in. If you
were to listen to the album at face value, you would take it as
another good Luna album and you would most likely wonder how far
the band would be willing to move from their formula on their next
album, if they were going to move at all.

If there is a sense of fatigue in
Rendezvous, it most likely comes in the lyrical department.
The title and lyrics to tunes like “Motel Bambi” and “Cindy Tastes
of Barbecue” seem to overreach in the irony department. And
“Astronaut,” a song already featured in their excellent
Close Cover Before Striking EP once again resurfaces on
Rendezvous. Still, other bands have included songs that were
featured on EPs and soundtracks on their full-length album. And
“Astronaut” does fit in to the overall “feel” of
Rendezvous.

Luna will be embarking on a lengthy farewell tour in late 2004
and they’ll tour through 2005. After that, it’s anyone’s guess
where the members will end up. Most likely Wareham and bassist
Britta Phillips will collaborate on another album to follow up
their
L’Avventura album. Like Soundgarden and Luscious Jackson,
the members of Luna mercifully realized they could go as far as
they could with their sound. As a result,
Rendevous will remain a rarity in music; a final swan song
of an album that retains much of the greatness that made the band
so beloved in the indie world.

Rating: B+

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