Friday, October 28, 2011

Lou Reed and Metallica - Lulu

Metallica were a band I was deeply invested in at around the ages of 10 through to 15. That’s a large section of someone’s life, especially at such a young age. I fell in love with the Black Album and Load was the first album I ever bought with my own money and at that time it might have been the first time I wanted to buy a CD instead of a PlayStation game.

I listened to every album religiously, even St. Anger. In fact I probably listened to St. Anger almost exclusively for months on end just because it was the new Metallica album. By the time Death Magnetic (horrible title) came out I was over Metallica and to be honest I felt the album was kind of boring. We’ll see where this one goes.

The album begins with Brandenburg Gate where the first lyrics in the song are:
I would cut my legs and tits off
When I think of Boris Karloff and Kinski
In the dark of the moon
I think I’ve made my mind up, almost nothing in recent times has grabbed my with a single verse like that. This is art. It takes a certain amount of emotion to want to cut your legs and tits off, and this isn’t experienced by many people. This is a fascination insight into Lou Reed’s psyche. And then James Hetfield comes in and says something in his James Hetfield voice to remind you that this is a Metallica collaboration. And then Lou Reed comes in and says something in his James Hetfield voice to remind you that this is a Lou Reed and Metallica project. The lyrics have basic rhyming structure that pays homage to Syd Barrett.

In The View some of the strains of the collaboration begin to show. This is kind of like that song on The Beatles White Album “Paul, Why Don’t You Just Fuck Off #9”. Lou tells Metallica that ‘I want to see your suicide’ and ‘you worship someone who actively despises you.’ Hetfield is obviously taking a lot of this to heart when he says “I am the table.” The genius is how multifaceted this lyric is. It explains James’ frustration at his band being reduced to musical furniture on what was supposed to be a fair collaboration. It also references the time Reed ate food off of him.

Pumping Blood is about all the things a heart can do. Primarily this includes pumping blood, making you waggle your ass like a dark prostitute and playing some not very compelling music. It also has some interesting juxtaposition between sexuality and violence in the same vein as the end of Apocalypse Now where Charlie Sheen’s dad kills Don Corleone while Jim Morrison says ‘fuck me’ over and over, whilst proving that ‘winning’ is genetic.

Mistress Dread is the albums love song. A love song that goes into bloodplay and coprophagia, but love is a difficult beast and it’s an interesting journey through some of the darker corners the path of true happiness winds down. Iced Honey continues with the themes of the unpredictability of life. The progressive side of the album kicks in with Cheat On Me. It continues some of the earlier themes but is lyrically a very direct and compelling work. My favourite line is ‘I am a passionateless wave on the sea.’ This is Shakespearean because it makes up a word. 

Frustration is a song I can relate to because I was frustrated the other day. The song does a great job of capturing the moment of frustration. The bit that’s too artistic for me is the bit where he talks about being ‘dry and spermless like a girl’. In my experience that does very little to help so it must be a metaphor. Little Dog is a commentary on the role of status in the 21st century. Kind of like Working Class Hero, but Working Class Dog. Dragon has an element of Beat poetry, but with a drone instead of a beat. Drone poetry. It them kicks up a notch with a solid rock beat and becomes beat poetry again. The line:
Do you think we're a book
Some kind of a table
You can rest your feet on when you're able
Indicates that Reed and Metallica have settled their differences and now eat off of each other equally. This means they can focus their efforts into the centrepiece of the album, the epic Junior Dad. This is definitely the longest Metallica song and at about nineteen minutes is nearly as long as the first seven minutes of Sister Ray by The Velvet Underground. It’s a dense soundscape which pulls all of the previous themes together and also add the new theme of drowning.

Serious review: 

Does this count as two? I was dreading this but to be honest I actually think some of it’s pretty good. It’s probably one of the better Metallica albums and intentional or not it’s the closest to ‘weird music’ that I’ve heard that’s recent and from A-list popular music royalty. The second half is worth more than the first, the huge exception being Brandenburg Gate. The lyrics make no sense to the point of self parody yet have absolute conviction in them. Junior Dad is the new ‘typical’ Lou Reed song for me, overtaking Andy’s Chest, which come to think of it makes no sense either. It’s also musically my favourite one thing Metallica have worked on in a long time. When I heard about Death Magnetic being more ‘Justice-like’ this is kind of what I had in mind. Maybe the overlength of the track kind of reminds me of the pacing of The Lovely Bones (in a bad way) especially considering the length of the album as it is but to be honest I think it’s an okay album. Not sure what the concept is supposed to be though.

And it's cool that it was uploaded for free. Not sure what the commerical strategy is there though.

Thursday, October 27, 2011

Katatonia – Night Is The New Day

Review# 316

Its a horrid clammy, foggy, rainy, dark, damp day. Its the perfect time to listen to Katatonia then. Night Is The New Day is a marvellously dark peice of work, as implied by the title, that mixes Doom, Prog and touches of Goth all into one despondent and sadly beautiful album. It is an album that you really do get the most out of it when listening to it start to finish, its not really a "singles" album at all. This was one of my favourite albums of 2009 and it is still holding up well with no lessening in its impact.

Forsaker: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IZFCKvzZhBI
Nephilim: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LbESAxc6BZs

Metallica – St Anger

Review# 315
Wow, I had forgotten how bad the drums sound. What is Lars doing to his kit? And why? Does he think it sounds good? Surely someone would have told him that its pants! And James Hetfield's vocals and lyrics aren't much better. I really had forgotten how bad this album is. Once you hear those drums its hard to listen to anything else that's going on in the album. I guess at least its a talking point, certainly nothing else on the album is.

St Anger: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rMEp_5FMXRE

Fields Of The Nephilim – Laura

Review# 314

Although this compilation was released in 1992, two years after third album (and at the time final studio album) Elizium, it is entirely made up of tracks from debut album Dawnrazor as well as tracks from ep releases etc. If you are mad keen on FOTN then this is worth tracking down for the original, and in my opinion much more impacting, versions of Darkcell and Trees Come Down. There is also two versions of Gehenna; Returning To Gehenna & Back In Gehenna and two versions of Laura; Laura and Laura (again) – both of which are different to the version that appears on Dawnrazor. Then there is a few other Dawnrazor tracks mixed in. Overall it makes for an interesting listen.

Returning To Gehenna: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Vq2S3n0FsOM
Laura: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GjA1lXw_xoY

Lou Reed & Metallica – Lulu

Review# 313


So this is now streaming through the official Lou Reed & Metallica site http://www.loureedmetallica.com/listen-to-lulu.php


It is not good. Here is a copy of the concept: “Lulu was inspired by German writer Frank Wedekind’s plays “Earth Spirit” and “Pandora’s Box,” which tell a story of a young abused dancer’s life and relationships.
The plays, originally published in 1904 and set in Germany, Paris and London in the 1890s, whirl between the points of view of Lulu, an inverted-Eve-like cipher-mirror of desire and abuse, and the people who fall desperately in love with her. Lulu is the great femme fatale. She was conceived as immoral. Or amoral.”


So, interesting idea? Does it work when an old man talks some lyrics in a very old-manny voice while the most commercially successful metal band plays some rather boring riffs in the backround and Lars Ulrich abuses a drum kit like he is a 12 year old boy who just learnt to masturbate? Ummm... no. Oh and James Hetfield yells “I AM A TABLE I AM A TABLE” … yes James. And that is not even the most bizarre lyric... “I swallow your sharpest cutter, like a coloured man's dick” … ummmm???


And the album is long... just too long and tedious. Especially the 19.29min song at the end, Junior Dad, which drags on and on with just strings and not really a lot going on.

And check out the dislikes for the first track to be released, The View, below.


Boris – Smile

Review# 312

Another spectacular Boris album; fuzzy guitars, semi ethereal sprawling tracks ripped apart by a sudden onslaught of unleashed energy. The guitar work on Smile is fantastic, it is really the key in this album while the vocals add an interesting and kind of haunting counterpoint. If you like experimental music or the stoner rock scene then this is worth a listen.

KA RE HA TE TA SA KI - No Ones Grieve: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bnveiHooTZk

Monday, October 24, 2011

Pink Floyd - The Man and The Journey


Here we’re getting obscure. This is an interesting part of the bands career which has nearly been lost. The Man and The Journey, originally billed as The Massed Gadgets of Auximenes – More Furious Madness From Pink Floyd are two sets that present the first attempt at a concept work for the band and it’s interesting to see where some ideas that came a lot later got their genesis.

The set used some old material, some new, to create a larger vision than the pop songs on Piper at the Gates of Dawn and A Saucerful of Secrets. The band established two sets which were their first concept projects. The Man follows the theme of a man through the course of his day. This is particularly interesting because it was reused on 1971’s Meddle. The set uses titles like ‘Work’, ‘Teatime’ and ‘Nightmare’ to show their relevance to the concept. Work and Teatime are the most interesting talking points in terms of experimentation. Work is a percussive peice which uses the sound of sawing and Teatime is the band being served and drinking tea on stage, which evolved into ‘Alan’s Psychedelic Breakfast’ from Atom Heart Mother.

I have no idea what The Journey’s about at all. In any case it’s a fascinating document of early Pink Floyd and it’s surprising that there’s been no official release of this material. Another interesting point was how silent the audience was throughout the actual music. No wonder Waters lost it with stadium audiences on the In The Flesh tour.