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Window in the Rhythm

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7.7

  • Genre:

    Rock

  • Label:

    Polyvinyl

  • Reviewed:

    November 2, 2024

In an unexpected coda to the indie-lifer trilogy that ended with 2018’s Aftering, the Ann Arbor musician again revisits his youth—but this time interrogating nostalgia, rather than indulging in it.

“Do you remember?” are Fred Thomas’ first words on Window in the Rhythm—and the subtext for every lyric that follows. Can you recall every sound, sight, and smell from a 2002 DIY show, but not where you left your keys five minutes ago? Ever search for your wretched student rental on Google Street View? If so, you’ve got a potential Fred Thomas song in you. Though Thomas is usually juggling three different projects at any given time, he’s an Ann Arbor Proust on his solo records, swapping a madeleine for the shittiest slice of Backroom pizza. But his reveries are no longer content to accept nostalgia alone as an endgame. On Window in the Rhythm, Thomas dares to ask why you remember.

The album is an unexpected coda to the indie-lifer trilogy Thomas ostensibly completed with 2018’s Aftering. Those albums were cobbled together like mixtapes, collaging twee-pop, folk-punk, Elephant 6 fan-fic, and abstract electronica, to better represent the full scope of his interests. (One such mixtape turns up in the opening “Embankment,” where he sings, “I made you a tape with the same Squarepusher song on it four times, but not in a row/To mimic the way so much was haphazard/The abundance of magic in a fragmented flow.”) This time around, Thomas name-drops Joanna Newsom’s Ys as a primary influence. His story checks out: There’s harp in the credits (by Mary Lattimore and Shelley Burgon) and the average song length is eight and a half minutes. But the basics of Thomas’ sturdy songcraft haven’t changed; discursive, sung-talked verses just take the scenic route before jolting upright into tightly wound, Motown-inspired harmonies.

Thomas’ memory transcends “photographic” or even “cinematic.” His most evocative writing yet creates a sensual feast of all drabs—“the dull, bathwater-colored glow of every Adderall halo”; “dingy gray water in a vase”; “an ugly, unwashed tie-dye tee”; “mattress on the basement floor/Black sheets hung in place of doors.” In any of those images, the taste of stale Pabst comes back so strongly, I felt the urge to pop three sticks of peppermint gum.

Like any search for lost time, it’s all inherently indulgent, and though even casual lurkers might catch the references to his early emo outfit Lovesick, the lyrics sheet probably should’ve come with annotations. Yet not a single second feels wasted, not when the whole point is to restage the formless stretches of a mid-20s that only take shape in retrospect: perpetual Novembers and rusting springtime bicycles, days arranged around perfunctory parties and dead-end jobs. The supersized closer “Wasn’t” is half feedback drone, but even that decision supports Thomas’ mixtape mindset by pushing Window in the Rhythm to exactly one hour. “Coughed Up a Cufflink” feels downright efficient, condensing the silence of an all-day trek through the Midwest into 10 mesmerizingly tense minutes. Midway through, a brief glimpse from the past expands into a full-on melodrama:

Little dead bird on the sidewalk
And how beside it you placed the cardboard sign that you made
That said “I’m happier this way.”
And what your sign meant, I ignored then
Because I cared so much more
About having a girlfriend than understanding the person you were

Fred Thomas albums thrive on these moments of reckoning, folding forbidden truths into unflattering guilty pleas. Yet where he used to relitigate old grudges—against Olympia street punks, his former boss at American Apparel, unnamed frenemies who achieved mainstream indie-rock success—on Window in the Rhythm, he takes a different view of living in the past. “You treat your past like an uncashed check,” he sniffs on “Electric Guitar Left Out in the Street,” an indictment of those who hang onto memories of exes and shitty jobs and social slights, rather than processing them and moving on. Perhaps himself, perhaps the listener, but likely both.

After all, Thomas has spent the past decade trying to get to the immaculate core of the most shameful feelings, nostalgic for every DUI and UTI that felt profound in the moment. “Absorbed in the gesture/Bored with the connection,” he sighs on “Wasn’t,” which comes perilously close to a happy ending to all this old remembering and new forgetting; “I was a different person then.” The time for endlessly rearranging inventory has ended for Thomas. Window in the Rhythm declares that everything must go.