Home » Articles » Features » Currently Reading:

2008’s great lost album: Poni Hoax – Images of Sigrid

Poni Hoax - Images of Sigrid

Poni Hoax - Images of Sigrid

Sometimes an album completely escapes a massive chunk of people who’d obsess over it, and it’s totally not fair; we’ll ignore the fact that we discovered this album almost four months after it was released. And sometimes you discover an album you want to keep to yourself because, y’know, you’re a bit of an elitist really. Well, very often, these two moments coincide and you’re left with a moral dilemma.

Then, the crux smacks you hard in the face. Why has this album grabbed me on the first listen? And why do I want to listen to it again and again? What is drawing me in? The answers to these questions are something we’re not entirely sure of, but there are certainly some common factors. We’re more likely to be drawn in by an artist having a distinct sound. Not something altogether original (although depends on your perception of ‘original’), but distinctly their own. And within that, some sort of ambit of variation and ambition. And if you’re reading this here review, then this must go without saying.

So, Images of Sigrid… we knew nothing about Poni Hoax other than that they’re from Barbes, France. And the fact that they make the most glorious disco we’ve heard this side of the Italians Do It Better compilations. Getting to the next level, Poni Hoax’s frontman Nicolas Ker has more than a touch of the Ian Curtis/Nick Cave lovechild about him, but let’s not get mistaken here: Poni Hoax are way more than a sum of their parts. Blacker than midnight disco is what this is, rooted in Depeche Mode and Gang of Four as much as it is in Giorgio Moroder.

It might well be about suicide, or failing that some sort of self-derivative, egotistical step-back on the character’s impact on/among other people – and it’s these ambiguities which make for a great repeated. The efforts at macabre seduction are endorphin-addled and simply screaming the juxtaposition of nonchalance and melodrama.

‘You’re Gonna Miss My Love’ opens with those choppy Franz Ferdinand guitars and then goes all disco with that charismatic, ever-so-slightly flat vocal layered on top of angelic choral backing vocals. And ‘Crash-Pad Driver’ opens like The B52s on horse tranq, soon turning into a feast of syncopated synth. The sound throughout is devastating, the vocals potent, rough and lonesome. There’s bits that remind us of Talking Heads, others that are altogether more Cramps-style garage punk – it’s a pick ‘n’ mix, really.

With the dichotomously deadpan vocal sitting neatly atop the weighty, dirty disco, this is an album that we sit and ponder about for long periods on end… would X Factor-watching plebs like this if it was forced on them? If ‘Antibodies’ was used for a trailer for Skins, would Poni Hoax become the next big thing? The answer to these questions (and more along those lines) is obviously an affirmative, and if the wigs making the decisions on what to shove down the herd’s throats next had a smidgeon of sense between them, then this Barbes lot would be The Next Big Thing. In the meantime, they’ll just have to suffer the criminal injustice of being sat in a small pocket in the corner of the room, waiting to be romantically uncovered and fallen in love with upon appropriation.

Running at 71 minutes short, the ambition on this album is boundless. It’s impossible to demarcate a comfort zone where Poni Hoax situate themselves, as they’re constantly striving to take on a different sound. Music is ambition. Life is ambition. Why not take it?

Written by Natalie Shaw

.. rules the Muso's Guide roost, as Editor thereof. Why? 'cause she considers the term 'music snob' redundant, because her music taste is infinitely better than yours and because she likes words a bit too much. She formulates and promotes the inaugural, seminal Muso’s Guide Presents… shows in London and is also the ears, keys, and mouse-clicker responsible for Muso’s Guide’s Last.fm charts.

blog comments powered by Disqus

Comment on this Article:







You might be interested in…

You will probably love these too...

Wildbirds & Peacedrums, The Lexington, London

September 3, 2010

By the encore, my insides are shaking and my heart is in my mouth.

Reading Festival, Caversham Bridge

September 3, 2010

It might be returning to the point where the music is more important than rioting.

Altar Eagle – Mechanical Gardens

September 2, 2010

You feel as if the two halves of Altar Eagle have travelled through their own musical influences and arrived at something entirely their own on the other side.

Ten Kens – For Posterity

September 2, 2010

That time spent in enforced proximity to each other has more than paid off.

Fan Death – Womb Of Dreams

September 1, 2010

From the get-go, this feels obviously orchestrated – maybe overly so.

Follow us on Twitter…

Become a fan on Facebook…

Join the conversation...

  • felixthehat: Aphex Twin is Richard James, Cunningham does the videos. Agr...
  • Laura Scott: I disagree with pretty much the entire review haha, but is i...
  • Natalie Shaw: Is what ironic, the piece? What would make you think it is?...
  • Ant_tzi: I was under the impression they were 18-20?...
  • jake Williams: I love this album. You've got it pegged all wrong mate....
  • anon: how old do you think they are? is 24-25 really that young?...
  • Kenny: it's not for every one buddy...
  • Frankie: This is a good read, but that "fodder for the crap writer" p...
  • Memorise_this: Is this ironic? I'm not sure if I hope it is or I hope i...
  • John Hryschko: TJ's does put on the occasional good band but I saw Anim...

You might like these…

Sign up for our newsletter right here!

Our hot new newsletter brings you exclusive updates, competitions, news and occasionally, jokes.

Do you want to sign up OR WHAT?

Promotional article: The Stones as you’ve never seen them before

From the beaches of Newport in Australia, there’s a new type of crooning cool that’s bound to grace the airwaves this season. Read more
Blog Widget by LinkWithin