The Snare is the third album by the Scottish band Looper, released in 2002.[2][3] Frontman Stuart David adopted the persona of Peacock Johnson.[4]
Production
The album shares themes and characters with David's novel The Peacock Manifesto.[5] "This Evil Love" is about romantic obsession.[6] The music shifted from the dance styles of the first two albums to include downbeat and trip hop elements.[7]
Pitchfork wrote: "Easy to dismiss, smirk at, or even hate on the fist listen, nine out of The Snare's ten tracks are grind-and-pause, semi-sultry pairings of exotic keyboard settings and mid-tech beats that exploit their refrains and come weirdly close to the patterns of 'risqué' after-dinner radio pop circa 1999-present."[10]Exclaim! determined that "as an isolated album it comes across as little more than sub-par art pop whose tunes are monotonous and whose lyrics are obtuse."[5]The Gazette considered it "a dark, brooding work which holds together well, but struggles to free itself from its own weight."[9]
The Sunday Herald deemed the album "10 menacing murder ballads, all characterised by ... dulcimer, baritone sax burps and tinkly music-box noises, backed by a Casio-keyboard approximation of the stuttering beats of modern R&B."[11]The Northern Echo called it "a black masterpiece."[12] The Philadelphia Daily News labeled it "a mysterious soundtrack of the mind with R&B, hip-hop and spaghetti western inflections."[13]
AllMusic wrote that "Looper drops their bright playfulness for a sophisticated, darker counterpart which uses jazz, R&B, and trip-hop as its foundation."[8]
Track listing
No.
Title
Length
1.
"The Snare"
2.
"Sugarcane"
3.
"New York Snow"
4.
"Peacock Johnson"
5.
"Driving Myself Crazy"
6.
"Lover's Leap"
7.
"Good Girls"
8.
"She's a Knife"
9.
"This Evil Love"
10.
"Fucking Around"
References
^"Caring for Looper". CMJ New Music Report. 71 (766): 42. Jun 10, 2002.