Glasgow-based artist David Shrigley doesn’t make music; instead, it’s the 39 indie and not-so-indie acts that provide the sound on Shrigley’s “Worried Noodles,” an art book/poetry expose compilation album.
p. This conceptual package offers 39 focused slices of new music from popular acts (David Bryne of Talking Heads, Franz Ferdinand), indie stars (Liars, Deerhoof, Grizzly Bear, Islands) and relatively unknown contributors (Munch Munch, Hank). ‘Noodles’ filters all of these elements through Shrigley’s odd and alarmingly humorous aesthetics.
p. As a line artist, painter and dark humor writer, Shrigley creates personal and savage books that compile his quickly scrawled cartoons. His poorly drawn images have the capacity to disturb, but their crudeness quickly reveals their weird humor.
p. I first saw Shrigley’s work on the cover of Deerhoof’s ‘Friend Opportunity’ earlier this year, but he has been collecting his ideas in book form since the early ’90s. He also animated the video for Blur’s 2003 single “Good Song.”
p. Every lyric on ‘Noodles’ comes from the tip of Shrigley’s Sharpie. The lyrics remain unchanged from Shrigley’s 2005 release of ‘Noodles’ as a stand-alone lyrical poetry book. Inspired by Shrigley’s style and curious inventiveness, a wide variety of bands have since put music to his words.
p. With so many bands represented, one might think the discs would spiral into unrelated blobs of competing noises, but the lyrics (one thing these songs share in common) hold their interpretive visions together. Whether playfully throwing out “pot hole / lamp post, tree stump / bean bag / Hey, whatcha doin’?” or something more somber, as in “Sad Song,” the lyrics paste their consistently humorous tone to each track.
p. Shrigley’s writing hits so many subjects: slugs, drinking, suicide, dwarves, diamonds, skulls, embarrassment and idiots. The casual content of his lyrics sprouts his humanity. The ordinary, sometimes trivial subject matter outlines a life of fun and trouble. Occasionally, the use of these lyrics feels forced or out of place, but Shrigley speaks through each song just the same.
p. ‘Noodles’ may stand as the base of Shrigley’s two-dimensional work, but the spacious musical compositions support the weight of their own aspirations quite adequately. The music retains the youthful vitality of Shrigley’s work and also allows each band the space necessary to project its own solution to the audio-visual problem. The compilation feels like the musical equivalent of walking through the National Gallery of Art, telling juvenile jokes in the face of century-old paintings. A sense of immaturity is imbued into each track. Each band channels Shrigley’s vision, granting him 39 voices with which to speak.
p. The sounds on ‘Noodles’ tap into a wide range of aural experiences. Some songs are predicated on sleepy blues rhythms, others on awkward pauses and mid-song intros. Exotic instrumentation meets dynamic execution from track to track, as high-energy pieces like Liars’ “Panic Button” juxtapose spoken word segments.
p. The often appropriate ’80s synth work peeks out from the ribcages of numerous tracks to provide a reference point. However, not all tracks shine in that spotlight-filtered-through-dirty-windows way that Shrigley’s spirit compels. Duds like the hopelessly pretentious “Once I Found a Diamond” by The Dead Science cry out for an immediate uncheck on iTunes. Setting aside the peculiar slant of the entire project, not too many of the songs would fall flat if yanked from their art-entrenched context.
p. The music perfectly compliments the 100-page jewel case-sized hardbound art book, which houses Shrigley’s writings and drawings. The art exemplifies classic Shrigley doodling. Plenty of confused naked people are joined by floating heads, creatures and shapes.
p. ‘Noodles’ is a natural progression from Shrigley’s Deerhoof collaboration, for which he designed 12 different album covers. Inside the book, crisp black and white pages reinforce the clean packaging. The paper feels expensive, which it ought to: The entire ‘Noodles’ package costs $40. Considering Shrigley’s art books sell for about $25 by themselves, the double disk album included in ‘Noodles’ justifies its price tag.
p. Your interest in Shrigley’s work will depend on your opinion of conceptual indie art, music and poetry. You will find yourself in the middle of a rare conversation between artists and musicians. The landscape is described best by a graph Shrigley plots at the end of ‘Noodles’: As time progresses, reality decreases on a squiggly negative slope and nonsense increases linearly.
