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REVIEW Unexpected existential instrumental album Mac DeMarco’s album romanticizes roadlife in song vibe, sound

HOPE SMITH managing editor hope.smith393@my.tccd.edu

Fourteen tracks for “Five Easy Hot Dogs” later and much of it can be summed up to what the “Teletubbies” landscape and the air balloon image optometrists show you would have sounded like if they made an instrumental album together. Which realistically doesn’t seem reasonable but neither does the title of the album, so they technically cancel each other out in terms of weirdness.

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It’s bleak. But it’s put into the perspective of personifying the process of developing the album when it was produced on a trip from Los Angeles to New York.

Often it’s easy to forget that music is also art when listening to it daily on the radio, on the way to work, streaming endlessly and on and on through the night while no one is really listening. It’s just there – always.

When Mac DeMarco made this album, it felt more like the road trip itself, like maybe he painted the experience through this album. So at first it’s odd, all instrumental, unsure of a purpose. Having experienced many of the roads taken to face a West to North trip like the one of Los Angeles to New York, some of these songs seriously sound like the landscape on the way over, and so much of it is just thinking. When I traveled much like that, all I could do was observe the landscape in front of me and watch the changes of the world as I sat in the car – rural to town and town to city.

That’s the “Teletubbies” landscape. It’s just enough to where it’s almost unsettling that all that space just exists, and the prospect of being alone with it makes someone want to never be alone to think of the sheer existentialism.

The air balloon optometrist image is

SHOW REVIEW just like that. Except there’s something in the distance to disturb all of the neutral green. It’s big and colorful, and it’s apparent in this album that despite the back rooms-turnednatural aura of the album, it will always have the DeMarco touch.

Each song is crafted by DeMarco in the way that it seems he’s made all of his music, so there is comfort in the chaos or lack thereof.

Overall, this doesn’t make a truly

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