
It doesn’t take too many spins to hear that something very
different is happening on The Wishes And The Glitch, the fifth record
from Say Hi principle Eric Elbogen. Yes, the dry sense of humor
is never far, but gone are the persistent musings about robots and
vampires, replaced here instead by a complicated mapping of the
post-twenty something psyche, by the slow implosion of someone who
fell out of love with everything he once held dear and who attempts
to muster just enough gumption to get back and begin something fresh.
Wishes discards the fictional protagonists that adorn Elbogen’s
previous records. It offers up something entirely more wholesome,
a glimpse into the songwriter’s disappointments and excitement
at new prospects. It makes sense, in light of this, that he would
present this record with the truncated band name (Say Hi is the
former Say Hi To Your Mom), choosing to discard the perceived teenage
potty humor and suggest something more universal, simple and personal:
a salutation to things new.
It’s among the washy guitars and jittery synths that the backstory
unfolds, via a voice that, once whispered, is now lifted and gut-sung.
With this we learn of Elbogen’s relocation from his Brooklyn
home of seven years to the faraway Seattle, Washington and the necessary
dismantling of relationships (both professional and personal) that
resulted. In songs like “Northwestern Girls,” he considers
in awe his new surroundings and pleads with himself to not sabotage
his new life like he’s done in the past. Elsewhere, as in
“Back Before We Were Brittle,” he fights the impulse
for nostalgia and calculates carefully the prescription for doing
so. And then there are songs like “Zero To Love,” where
a futurist utopia means happiness is permanent, and “Apples
For The Innocent,” in which the post-coitus conundrum is dissected
for consideration by all.
It would be unfair to discuss thematic content alone, however, because
any song, despite its wit, is only as good as the accompanying hooks.
But Wishes doesn’t lack in that department either. The barrage
of indie-pop songs that fill the record’s thirty-six minutes
are musically richer than anything Elbogen has done before. Keyboards
chime and swoosh, drums bump, basslines wiggle and vocal melodies
shoot and fall, converging at the expected intersections some places
and surprising with new tangents others. And while the intimacy
is never lost, the songs sound big, classically anthemic even.
Say Hi was founded in Brooklyn, NY in late 2002, as was Euphobia
Records, a label started by Elbogen to facilitate the release of
that year’s Discosadness LP. Three more records followed over
the next few years (2004’s Numbers & Mumbles, 2005’s
Ferocious Mopes and 2006’s Impeccable Blahs). Immediately
after relocating to Seattle, Elbogen wrote and recorded The Wihses
And The Glitch at his home studio over the bulk of 2007. And yes,
his studio inhabits the same room he sleeps in. Touring keyboardist
/ vocalist Nouela Johnston (the touring line-up for Say Hi is ever-evolving)
contributed vocals on three of the songs. The Long Winters’
John Roderick and Pedro The Lion / Headphones’ David Bazan
also sing on a track each. Everything else was performed by Elbogen,
himself.
Having toured non-stop since the beginning, Say Hi has shared the
stage with the likes of Nada Surf, The Wrens, Mates of State, Pinback,
Headphones, the Long Winters, American Analog Set, Bishop Allen,
+/-, John Vanderslice and Menomena, among many others. The band
has no plans to curb its busy show schedule and will tour relentlessly
throughout 2008 in support of The Wishes And The Glitch. Euphobia
Records and the entire Say Hi catalog are distributed by ADA via
an exclusive agreement with New York’s The Rebel Group. The
band is booked by the Kork Agency.