It could have been a book of short stories. Or a mixed-media art installation, or even some new architectural marvel.
It is, after all, an album titled Imperial Phase, and it evokesâand then necessarily chops to piecesâall the desire, over-reach, and moral obscenity that such an expression implies. The phrase itself, repeated in the titular song by Plastic Antsâ singer-songwriter Robert Cherry, originated with another urbane, media-smart singer-songwriter, the Pet Shop Boysâ Neil Tennant, and itâs pure cheek, as it absolutely must be. It initially conjures those can-do-no-wrong, insouciant chapters in the stories of many an ascendant entertainment careerâthat moment of perfect platinum power, or in this case, gold (a color mentioned five times on the record). Itâs when things get exquisitely, breathlessly, insufferably stratospheric.
We all know what happens next, and it ainât pretty.
But it was, for a time. Golds, greens, and sandy hills-of-Hollywood tonalities gild this album from top to bottom. Yet these deeply engrossing pop songs also, cannily, throw gobs of shade right back at it all, often drawing an astute connection between the entertainment and empire-building industries and their self-immolating tendencies, and doing so in croons. The result brings to my mind the handsome tension of, say, Bryan Ferry in a punch-up with Paul Wellerâthink suave with a few bruises and a lot more teeth.
But there is also an even deeper level the songs and their interconnecting stories augur, for the Plastic Antsâ take on âimperialâ ephemerality is surprisingly and passionately personal. Celebrity culture is used, ingeniously, as a kind of mise en scĂšne through which a set of contemporary characters move. Instead of prisoners in Platoâs Cave, staring at shadows from light projected behind them, theyâre numbly tapping Angry Birds on a private jet ride to Malibu, while their actual lives fall apart.
In this, Imperial Phase could not be more of our time. It poses crucial, timely questions. Do people in todayâs Instagrammed and Facebooked relationships imitate the lives of Hollywood celebrities, or do the stars pretend they are just like usâlost, hopeful, and playing a game in codes they donât understand. Itâs the kind of ârealityâ versus âappearancesâ paradox this album repeatedly seems to ask. The answer, for Plastic Ants, is always bothâand neither.
That Plastic Ants have chosen pop songs as the vehicle to communicate a new, broad-spectrum artwork ends up seeming both incidental and inevitably perfect. Yes, these are gorgeous songs, songs of an almost shameless enormityâeach feels, in its own way, as big and dangerously glorious as a setting California sunâbut they speak a multimodal artistic language so fluently, you get snagged on several levels at once.
There are not only clever but meaningful literary nods to S.E. Hinton, to Wordsworth, to childrenâs bedtime books. And then there are the devilishly calibrated visualsâthe website, the album art, the videos, the Vincent Perraud photography. A whole very distinct and mesmerizing story pours through all this, threaded with imagery that both mourns and pokes fun at past golden eras of marketing, and especially the late â60s and early â70s, when many of the band membersâCherry, bassist-producer John Curley, drummer Joe Klug, and keyboardist-singer Guy Vanasseâwere born.
The desolation of scripted marketing and the fame game are not only topical foci here, theyâre themes and subtexts, and they come in for heavy scrutiny. At times, the characters work against the flow of tinsel-town clichĂ© with great, if brittle, courage: âShe donât wait for permission/She makes up her own games/From a town with so little vision, baby/She ripped the script to pieces and tore awayâ (âA Sea of Upturned Facesâ). At other moments, we dig deep into the narcissistic assholedom and degeneracy of relationship âactingâ: âDestiny No Longer Waitsâ returns to the gaming motif, with Cherry singing about someone who lives âlife like itâs a video game/And the love you only simulate/Leaves her wanting more.â
Ironically, the fingerprints of Cherryâs other professional careersâheâs a longtime music magazine editor (also like Tennant) turned successful creative directorâseem to be all over his handiwork here, and itâs, well, complicated. One past video promo on the Plastic Antsâ website features an Edie-cool model who plays an Air France flight attendant returning home, tired, to her icy-hip, lonesome apartment, click-clacking up cold stairs in black heels and pulling out a presumably rejuvenating vinyl Plastic Ants record. That character was a kind of tribute to and critique of a bygone ad-world chic.
On Imperial Phase, a similar but changed figure (whoâs a little more Cheryl Tiegs/Jerry Hall than Sedgwick) of a young woman appears. The â60s feel quite over here, and Edie has ODâd. This young person is all West Coast success and arrival, with rippling gold hills in the distance. With her shoes left behind in the dust, she gazes out a white, â70s-vintage Porsche (not hers, we sense) thatâs perhaps a bit better preserved than her own dreams, which look both achieved and, suddenly, rather worthless. She seems both freed and trapped: âSurfing the zeitgeist was quite nice there up on the wave,â sings Cherry on the title song. âBut you had to know, it had to break.â Break indeedâlike Pacific waves against Venice Beach, like the â60s good vibrations against the hard jetties of post-Nam, post-Kent State, post-Jimi-and-Janice. Imperial Phase is there, at that moment, to record, write, sing, and visualize all the pieces, and to figure out what happens next.
Personally, I hate the term âchamber pop,â a term used to describe the bandâs debut album, Falling To Rise. Itâs so small, so orderly, so âchambery,â after all. If these are chambers, they come with unfolding, Christopher Nolan walls. They embrace real risks: âHe stepped from the wreckage of her first attack,â sings Cherry on âThe Girl Who Stole The World,â with whispers of Bowie in that Faustian title. âNow what would he give to get that moment back.â
What does come next? Thatâs what every listener can feel good about. âLightâ is a word mentioned eight times on Imperial Phase, but the noun mentioned more than any other word, tellingly, magnificently, is âlove.â
When Love comes into this world, itâs inescapable, and it hits hard. In one of the recordâs most memorable, instantly hummable songs, âYou Will Know Love,â Cherry simply offers no alternative: âYou will know love⊠Like a hammer to your skull.â
In the end, those souls forlorned and lost in the Pacific are brought back to shoreâsadder, wiser, but stronger, too. Our woman in the 911 ditches the narcissist asshole sheâs been dating, and steals the car: âNo oneâs princess doesnât need no prince kiss/âCause she already stole his whole world.â
And his Porsche. And our hearts.
Imperial Phase may have that effect on you, too. It is, in many ways, a masterful narrative about surviving all âimperialâ moments in todayâs world, and moving towards what is deeper, richer, and more enduring than even, well, gold.
âBill Broun, July 2016
Brounâs first novel, Night of the Animals, is out now on Ecco Books/Harper Collins. Discover more about the author at BillBroun.com













