1) You Only Live Once; 2) Juicebox; 3) Heart In A
Cage; 4) Razorblade; 5) On The Other Side; 6) Vision Of Division; 7) Ask Me Anything;
8) Electricityscape; 9) Killing Lies; 10) Fear Of Sleep; 11) 15 Minutes; 12) Ize
Of The World; 13) Evening Sun; 14) Red Light.
General verdict: It is mildly impressive to see Julian and
the boys last for over 50 minutes, but whereʼs the goddamn money shot?
I suppose that the first thing to cross many Strokes
fansʼ minds when they saw the title of this album was — «wait, are the guys
going psychedelic or something? this looks like a frickinʼ Eloy title or
something!» (disclaimer: I fully acknowledge that not many Strokes fans
probably know anything about Eloy, and that they are much better off that way).
The second thing, then, would be to note the running length of the album — 52
minutes? Oh boy, deep shit coming on... what exactly happened to that perfect
35-minute limit?
Well, let me tell you this — had the Strokes
gone all progressive and pretentious on our asses, it might have been an artistic disaster, but at least it would have
made the album into a glorious disaster, rather than leaving it in this state
of boggy slump. In reality, nothing much has changed, other than the bandʼs
producer (David Kahne stepping in for Gordon Raphael) and the fact that the ever-lengthening
stretches in between recording sessions gave Julian more opportunities for
songwriting, and we now have 14 of his songs instead of the usual 11–12. Unfortunately,
each of these songs is still about 1–1½ minutes longer than it should be, because
the Strokes have never bothered to learn the art of dynamic expansion: you
learn everything there is to be learned about each of the songs in 30–60
seconds, and then itʼs just repetition of ideas, very few of which deserve to
be repeated without development.
The album was announced with a bit of deception:
ʽJuiceboxʼ, the first single, is faster, tighter, and rockier than just about
any other song on here, starting out with a bona fide ʽPeter Gunnʼ style
bassline and quickly transforming into a grungy screamer in which Julian
berates his lover for not wishing to join him over for the dubious delights of
big city life. It is hard to resist a crunchy ʽPeter Gunnʼ rip-off, but the
song does become fairly generic pop-punk in its screechy "why wonʼt you
come over here?" bridge part, and the "youʼre so cold, youʼre so cold"
chorus fails at delivering a properly desperate vibe either musically or
vocally.
The second single, ʽHeart In A Cageʼ, was both
more indicative of the overall pulse of the album (slower, poppier, darker) and
more musically enjoyable in general, maybe because of Nick Valensiʼs loud,
thick, in-yer-face glammy lead guitar lines echoing past heroes like Mick Ronson.
Its only problem is that, like everything else here, it delivers one hundred
percent of its punch in the opening sixty seconds — thereʼs a tension-relieving
bridge section on which Casablancas goes for a tender Ray Davies-like approach,
but it doesnʼt fit in all that well with the rest of the song and its melody
goes absolutely nowhere. As Casablancas confesses himself within the opening
verse of the song, "I donʼt write better when Iʼm stuck in the ground",
and there are quite a few moments on this album when he almost literally is stuck in the ground.
The monolithic production style and the bandʼs
noble, but sometimes wearying devotion to the same vocal and instrumental tones
actually makes it very hard to
distinguish between respectable and lazy songwriting when you have 50 minutes
of this shit. ʽRazorbladeʼ strikes me as a good example of the former, with its
unusual 5/4 tempo and dialog between a folksy, college-rockish, densely
strummed rhythm guitar and highly melodic electric lead — but the production
kind of eats away at both these parts, muffling them and making them secondary
to Julianʼs post-punk nasal drawl. On the other hand, ʽVision Of Divisionʼ is a
confusing mess of everything — I know I have complained about the lack of dynamics,
and this song has plenty of it, but when you start out all grungy like Nirvana
and then follow it up with an AC/DC-esque ʽThundrestruckʼ-style lead guitar, itʼs
just... incoherent.
Maybe the worst thing about it all is that over
the course of three albums, Julian Casablancas has still not managed to convince
me that I should really truly care about himself, his girl problems, or his
difficulties in coping with the complicated urban lifestyle with which he has
this love-hate relationship. As the album begins its long crawl towards the
finish line, it seems to become more and more personal, with superficially
panic-stricken songs like ʽFear Of Sleepʼ inviting you to identify with their
concerns — but the tune offers nothing to me other than a jumbled mess of
distorted guitar and vocal noise, and I do not feel any real panic behind the mess. Maybe itʼs because of this sanitized
production: I keep thinking about how, say, the Birthday Party would have
recorded this song in the early Eighties, and against those memories the Strokes do not stand a chance. Basically, the
deeper and more psychological Casablancas wants to go, the less he is liable to
make a real impression.
Throw in a really
unsatisfying conclusion — the album closer ʽRed Lightʼ sounds like a mildly
passable monotonous pop-rocker that should have legitimately occupied a filler
position in the middle — and it is not easy to understand why First Impressions Of Earth did not make
much of an impression on most of Earthʼs critics. It is not a bad album: it is an album that tries
very hard to transcend the inherent limitations of the artists, like a great
100-yard dasher betting on a 200-yard dash despite the doctorʼs wise advice. Cut
out half of the songs, trim down the other half, invest a bit more in the arrangements,
slightly de-sanitize the production, replace the annoying lyrics with simple
boy-loves-girl stuff, and you have here the potential for an excellent modern
pop-rock EP. As it is — another filler city for an already filler-choked
century.
I must have heard this album a few times, bt can't remember a single thing of it. Reading your review a few things tickle my mind, but it does show how unimpressive this album was.
ReplyDeleteYour last sentence seems to have a wrong double negation unless I misread ("it is not easy to understand why First Impressions Of Earth did not make much of an impression on most of Earthʼs critics." should be it is easy to understand?)
Your complaints about lyrics is something I have a hard time with. I don't care about Strokes lyrics either, but let's be fair, you never criticized the Beatles for their mediocre lyrics.
New Strokes album out today. 9 songs in 45min. I don't have high hopes but will give it a spin today.
The new album sounds a bit better than the last one (seems Casablancas & co. actually cared a bit more this time) but it's still quite a step down from Is This It. There;s a couple of decent tracks that'll likely stay in live setlists for a while, but it's nothing to write home about.
Delete"You Only Live Once" is the only one from this album that seems to register with me, with its weird percussion and slightly-more-memorable-than-usual melody. Even that one isn't great. It suffers a bit by sounding like every other song they've performed: same midtempo performance, same dual-guitar arrangement, same muddled vocals. It's worth noting, though, the stripped-down demo of the song does show a bit more stylistic diversity than I'm used to with these guys, which makes me wonder why they feel compelled to "Strokes-ify" everything into sounding exactly the same. Ah, well.
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