The next video will play in {s} seconds. Click here to remain on current page

No one's gonna mistake Spoon for the Stones, but it's worth remembering that they've been around a while: Telephono, the Austin guitar-pop outfit's first LP, came out in April of 1996, a few months before Tupac's tragic shooting and, yes, the wildfire debut of the Spice Girls. Indie rock has amassed serious cultural capital in the intervening years—recall Arcade Fire's Grammy triumph—yet Spoon, which shares a label with that arty Canadian crew, still awaits its household-name moment. In the wake of a brief, messy late-90s major-label tenure, the band has persisted, and thrived, in a weird middle zone: too big for the underground, too small for a mass-audience takeover.

You get the sense that Spoon leader Britt Daniel is cool with that. The group's crafty power pop is the kind that's made by and for connoisseurs. Spoon's best songs function like great techno: The parts fit together so well that you don't realize how much is actually going on. Consider "The Mystery Zone" from 2010's Transference, on which Daniel & Co. gradually stack spacey textures atop a spare, funky rhythm track, yielding a lush rock mantra that feels like it could go on forever. On "Written in Reverse," from the same album, Daniel lets a skeletal R&B vamp carry him into raw-throated, Lennon-ish pop catharsis. As you can tell from Spoon's brief moniker, sourced from a Can song, this is a band that believes in maximizing minimal materials.

That was clear right from the start. The band's debut release, The Nefarious EP—issued in 1994, the year after Daniel formed Spoon with Jim Eno, the drummer of his prior band, the Alien Beats—indulged in a little Pixies-styled weirdness, but mostly, it sounded like the start of a quest for the perfect hook. Fortunately, the band's embrace of a more polished sound over the years hasn't dulled its outsider charm; Daniel, the band's mercurial center, still comes off more like a possessed pop preacher than a crowd-pleasing showman. Mainstream success may have eluded Spoon, but there's an upside: Nearly two decades after their founding, they still sound like hungry upstarts.

By Hank Shteamer

You should definitely watch part 2 right now.

Comments

More From This Show

  • A-Trak & Dillon Francis - "Money Makin'"

    Get funky, Mr. ATM machine.

  • What Do Cute Kids Think About Skrillex?

    Despite his trans-continental fame, multiple Grammy wins, and nearly perfect 'do, a lot of people still don't know what to make of Skrillex. With that in mind, we asked our panel of adorable tots, tyk…

  • We Talked to NOFX About Raising Children

    NOFX has been around for almost 30 years, and they continue to make new punk bands look like they're all trying too hard.

  • No Joy

    Stacking fuzzed-out guitar upon fuzzed-out guitar, Quebecois grungers No Joy produce the sort of no-frills riffage that the bland nu-gaze establishment sorely needs. We saw No Joy at the Casa Del Popo…

  • Dillon

    Dominique Dillon de Byington is the German songstress known as Dillon. Blending together a subdued palette of electronica, baroque chamber-pop, and limited orchestration, the 23 year-old has crafted a…

  • FIDLAR

    You can't take FIDLAR at their word. Like Nathan Williams from Wavves, this LA quartet champions a slacker lifestyle with the fervor of religious zealots; "Wake! Bake! Skate!" howls frontman Zac Carpe…

  • Kill For Total Peace

    Bands get labeled "psychedelic" for a bunch of different reasons. Sometimes it's because they wear bandanas. Sometimes it's because they smoke weed. For Parisian quintet Kill For Total Peace, it's pro…

  • Tom Vek

    Tom Vek is back. After a six-year sabbatical from the limelight, the London-based "beat rock" specialist has reemerged with a new album and a new lease on life. Properly tweaked for the 21st century,

  • YACHT

    YACHT is Jona Bechtold and Claire L. Evans, a power duo that traffics in breathless, upbeat electro-pop. Onstage they channel the vibrant, earnest joy of Stop Making Sense-era Talking Heads, with an a…

  • Turbowolf

    This British four-piece has blown the cobwebs off the UK rock scene with high-octane shows that trade in crunchy, dinosaur-shaped riffs, the death-or-glory spirit of DFA1979, and the pantomime stage a…