THE CHARLATANS: WHO WE TOUCH (2010)
1) Love Is Ending; 2) My
Foolish Pride; 3) Your Pure Soul; 4) Smash The System; 5) Intimacy; 6)
Sincerity; 7) Trust In Desire; 8) When I Wonder; 9) Oh!; 10) You Can Swim / On
The Threshold / Sing The Body Eclectic.
Good question, boys; although it may be worth
noting that this record charted much higher than its predecessor, and on the
whole, commercial fortunes of The Charlatans in the 2010s have shown a steady
increase compared to the fairly unhappy 2000s. One could argue that by 2010,
The Charlatans, like most formerly famous Britpop bands that managed to clench
their teeth and survive, had simply passed into «semi-legendary» status — that
in their native homeland, people simply buy up Charlatans records like they'd
buy up Paul McCartney and Rolling Stones records, without even giving them much
of a listen. But wouldn't that be too
much honor for these guys? Then again, the idea of a good Charlatans single
might have gotten heavily ingrained in the subconscious of the average 1990s
teenager...
...anyway, this is all pointless digression. Who We Touch is a nicely polished
record of catchy, polite, not particularly exciting alt-pop tunes. Curiously,
they chose Youth (Martin Glover) as their producer this time, so feel free to
pick on similarities with The Verve, or Embrace, or whatever other alt-rock
group he produced — the problem is, whatever The Charlatans used to be, they
just aren't that any more. Most
importantly, Tony Rogers' organ has been pushed so low in the mix that they
have lost this last trademark of their original sound. Instead, emphasis is
placed on multi-tracked vocals, multi-tracked acoustic and electric guitars,
synthesized and (occasionally) non-synthesized strings, in short, anything to
get these guys a massive wall of sound that will make them sound loud, proud,
and completely anonymous.
The songs are not bad, though; I'd say they are
doing something on the level of classic Ash now, and while I'm not a fan of
either, this is far from the worst pop-rock produced in that period. It's all
about catchy choruses now, and many of them are in good taste — as long as you
have the patience to sit through the opener, ʽLove Is Endingʼ, where the
chugging alt-rock guitar drone pretty much kills off any attempt to make its
chorus into anything special. It is just one of those generic tunes, you know,
that justify the entire «guitar rock is on its way out» approach.
But ʽMy Foolish Prideʼ, coming right on its
heels, is a big improvement. With pianos and strings taking the place of big
bad guitars, it manages to create just the right atmosphere of tenderness and
repentance in the chorus. The decision to culminate each chorus with the
acappella delivery of the line "make love, not war" is questionable,
but since it comes right after the Beatlesque descending line of "sweet
emissary tapping at my door", I guess we can forgive it even if we
disagree with it. Here, then, is a nice side effect of The Charlatans aging and
getting more sentimental and self-critical — they become capable of occasional
moments of touching beauty, even if they do tend to get unnoticed behind the
regular veil of mediocrity. (Frankly, there is nothing in this song beyond the
chorus that is salvageable).
Whatever happens after these two
not-so-far-removed extremes falls somewhere in between, and, frankly, does not
deserve lengthy discussions. Personally, I fall asleep now whenever they try to
recapture a bit of that old funk vibe (ʽYour Pure Soulʼ), get positively
offended when they slap the title ʽSmash The Systemʼ onto a song that has nothing
to do with Rage Against The Machine, but come alive again for ʽIntimacyʼ and
ʽSincerityʼ: the former is a slightly mystical, somewhat Roxy Music /
ABC-inspired decadent power ballad, the latter a fast and tightly focused
pop-rocker with retro-futuristic synths and a cool shout-out chorus — a
successful completion of the task initiated and provisionally failed with ʽLove
Is Endingʼ. As the album nears the end, though, it begins to bog down again,
particularly with the interminable ballad ʽOh!ʼ and the droning atmospheric
mood piece ʽYou Can Swimʼ (whose entire melodic base is more in line with
blowing bubbles at the bottom of the swimming pool rather than actually
swimming).
Adding insult to injury, the band ends up
proceedings with a hidden track that consists of performance artist Penny
Rimbaud delivering a lengthy lyrical piece to a repetitive, quasi-Gothic musical
background. I have nothing against the art of Penny Rimbaud (of which,
admittedly, I know quite little, since beat poetry is not really my thing), but
I have no idea why he has to be featured on a Charlatans record rather than,
say, a Patti Smith one. Isn't it too late for these guys to buy up creed from
aging beatniks, anyway? This could never be a good idea, let alone the fact of
its total incompatibility with the bulk of this fairly normal pop record.
Admittedly, it is a hidden track, so
it is legitimate for us to pretend it does not exist.
The good news, therefore, is that The
Charlatans have tightened up their craft, and are now producing a conveyer
line of pop songs, some of which might even stick in your head. The bad news is
that, well, just about anybody could have done this record, given a skilful
producer and a few years of musical expertise behind their backs. The surprising news is how they persist —
five LPs over ten years? in the twenty-first century? this kind of
tenaciousness is bound to get you somewhere
— I mean, look at Brian Jonestown Massacre, for instance, where every once in a
while Anton Newcombe comes out with a masterpiece, stuck between several pieces
of utter boredom. And so, at the expense of a complete loss of identity, Who We Touch is probably their best
offering since Wonderland, though
still not worthy of a thumbs up, in my opinion.
With this album Charlatans finally entered a "Their best album since ..." phase. I remember 2004 when Charlatans were still cool, you know, smart kids with good taste, haircuts and leather jackets. What happened after is the exact reason most teenagers don't want to grow up.
ReplyDeleteThere was a 2 disc, by the way and it containted this track https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Cy1M4o7IqUo I really loved more than the cuts, which made it to the final album.
Damn, what's up with the Blogspot authentification?
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