Point of Reference

Speaking of getting on the bandwagon, Pitchforkmedia.com, a site often driving these conveyances for a significant swath of the nation's music fans, reviews new music this week in the form of new discs from Carl Stone and Elodie Lauten. In your humble opinion, how well did they do?
I give Mike Powell points for risking mixing entertaining, over-the-top language--i.e. "foofy, inert bullshit peddled by charlatans to suckers who would stoop to intellectualize a rock"--with some universally comprehensible analysis:
Woo Lae Oak is an amnesiac for itself, an ever-renewing blank slate. The problem with assessing records like this is that they rely on the listener's tolerance and imagination, which, comfortingly for all parties involved, nobody has any control over. ...Stone even named the piece after the Chinese restaurant of his choice, a self-effacing gesture that acknowledges peace as marketable chintz-- where other composers might aspire to recreate ancient prayer scrolls, Stone takes refuge in fortune cookies. Even when I can't fully immerse myself in it, I leave with the important lesson that there's no inherent grandeur to size, no necessary seriousness to serenity.
Evocative writing, but it's not telling us what we're used to when it comes to new music record reviews. Are you missing what you're not reading? I like that there's no name-dropping. You don't need to know jack about any other recorded music in this genre to understand what's being discussed. That's not everyone's cup o' tea and sometimes the name-checking is vital to the issue at hand, but after reading this review I've seen the work from a fresh perspective and am excited to hear it again. That means it's done its job as far as I'm concerned.
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