17 May 2020

Midlake - Milkmaid Grand Army EP (2001)


1) She Removes Her Spiral Hair; 2) Paper Gown; 3) Excited But Not Enough; 4) I Lost My Bodyweight in the Forest; 5) Simple; 6) Roller Skate (Farewell June); 7) Golden Hour

Debut EPs rarely fully showcase what the artist in question would turn out to be like, but if you want to hear Midlake having a bit of an alt rock crunch to them, here's the only place you'll get a chance to.


Key tracks: "She Removes Her Spiral Hair", "Roller Skate (Farewell June)"

There's a fair few years between Midlake's first EP and their first album, and an even longer gap towards their breakthrough album The Trials of Van Occupanther and the arrival of what could be considered their signature sound. During those years Midlake were moving from sound to sound in search of something they could call their own. That Milkmaid Grand Army EP doesn't really connect sonically to any other Midlake release isn't too unexpected given the time between it and everything else, but it's still surprising because it's just so off the beaten path for them. Way before the fuzzy synths or the pastoral folk rock, Midlake's greatest inspiration (by their own words) was OK Computer and the sullen British guitar rock of the late 90s, and that's what they wanted to replicate.

It's strange to hear Tim Smith's voice over such straightforwardly guitar-rocking cuts - a real alternate universe what-if experience -  and maybe it's better for their legacy that the band moved away from this sound pretty quickly, but hot damn they're actually good at it. "She Removes Her Spiral Hair", "Excited But Not Enough" and "Roller Skate" are a great combination of britrock hooks with US indie je ne sais quoi quirk: the guitars have a good crunch to them, they're backed by the gorgeous retro synthesizers the band would emphasise for their debut, and while atypically rocking for this band they make the sound and songs theirs. They're missing a lot of what would make Midlake great when they became all grown up, but in the place of those aspects these songs have their own strengths. "She Removes Her Spiral Hair" is close to top-tier Midlake overall, with its pounding drums, swooning chorus and excellent, detail-oriented arrangement - and the other two aren't too far, with "Excited But Not Enough" dialling up the rock band intensity and the upbeat "Roller Skate" frolicking on with an off-kilter sense of fun, handclaps and all. The only downside here is the awkward sound swithc in "Excited But Not Enough" close to its end, which honestly sounds like an editing error taking away the joint between the song's two clear segments. I honestly thought my copy had an error in it; it's the one part of the EP that's scruffy and wobbles with the first steps.

Excluding the brief and rather non-descript instrumental interlude "I Lost My Bodyweight in the Forest", the other three songs are a more familiar fare. "Paper Gown", "Simple" and "Golden Hour" are all moodier mid-tempo cuts, gently pacing forward in their weariness: they also edge closer to a more familiar Midlake sound and could be Bamnan and Slivercork outtakes if you squint your eyes a little. They're good songs, but a little one-note and samey - I still mix them up - and the alternation between them and the guitar-heavier songs mainly just serves to highlight the excitement of the other three songs, reducing the mid-tempo posse into extended bridges between them. "Paper Gown" is the best of the lot because it has a bit more life to it than the other two and in its overall arrangement resembles the distant cousin of the songs it's sandwiched between, but these aren't the songs that make this EP interesting for fans.

That said, filing Milkmaid Grand Army EP into the same just-for-fans drawer most debut EPs end up in is a little unkind. There's nothing rough in this and it only really looks like an awkward party crasher because it's so far removed in relation to how Midlake would actually eventually sound like (in any part of their transformation-full career). It's a fully realised vision, which could have easily acted as a launch pad for a different kind of career; Midlake simply chose to pursue other ideas. It's far from a hidden gem too but the songs for most parts stand up proudly; and I'd be delighted to hear more from the mirror universe version of Midlake who'd go on to move directly forward from here.

Rating: 7/10

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