WHERE THE HOKEY POKEY "IS" WHAT IT'S ALL ABOUT

Black Rebel Motorcycle Club

Howl

  • AMG Review of Howl

    Amg
    Tim Sendra
    All Music Guide

    Since the release of Take Them On, On Your Own in 2003, things were tumultuous for Black Rebel Motorcycle Club. They were unceremoniously dropped by Virgin in a cloud of bad feeling. They lost their drummer. They bounced back and signed with RCA. They welcomed back their drummer. Somewhere in the middle of all this they completely revamped their sound. In fact, their first record for RCA, 2005's Howl, sounds like the work of an entirely different group. Gone are the insistent tempos, the snarling vocals, and the sheets of guitar noise. Gone is the hostile and often belligerent pose of the first two albums. Gone is the influence of /p>

    oise rock bands like the Velvet Underground and the Jesus and Mary Chain. The band has embraced classic American music, namely country, lues, and gospel. It's dramatically expanded its sound to the point where you wonder if the albums that preceded this were some kind of reductionist prank. The band has a light touch and sense of drama and arrangement here that seems to have come out of the blue. (Check the credit to T-Bone Burnett for "additional recording assistance" for a clue, though.) In fact, the first thing you hear on the album is enough to have you checking to make sure the disc isn't defective: the multi-tracked vocals of Peter Hayes and Robert Levon Been emulating a gospel choir at the beginning of "Shuffle Your Feet," a rollicking slice of front-porch country complete with strumming acoustic guitars, harmonica, handclaps, and slide. It's no fluke because for the most part the album that follows is built on similarly relaxed, acoustic, and loose underpinnings. Tracks like "Still Suspicion Holds You Tight," "Devil's Waiting" (which features the return of the multi-tracked choir), and "Complicated Situation" have a lightness and ease that they previously could never have achieved. Other songs benefit from the expansion of sound too: "Weight of the World" has an epic, reaching-for-the-stars feel not a million miles from Coldplay and their followers (though it has more gritty soul than that), while "Howl"'s fuzz chamber sound is the closest thing to their previous work, but the circus organ, sleigh bells, and dynamics give the song color where it would have been shades of gray. On these songs and elsewhere the vocals are much more a part of the sound now as they are more upfront and impassioned. Both Hayes and Been have fine voices that are well suited to their new direction, sincere and gritty but never strained. Along with a new sound BRMC seem to have found religion too, as nearly half the songs revolve around God, the Devil, sin, and salvation. "Restless Sinner" and "Gospel Song" (which shows that the band hasn't completely abandoned its old influences, as the song is filtered closely through Spaceman 3's interpretation of gospel) are the most obvious manifestation of this new focus, but much of the record has the exuberance and weight of a band wrestling with heavy emotions. Well, that but without being quite as boring as it sounds. Of course, boredom is relative and by the end of the record you may find yourself wondering whatever happened to your ock & roll. You may feel betrayed by their sudden shift away from noise and danger, confused by the sudden change from a band of sulky post-teens with sex and danger on their minds to questioning (though still young) adults looking for salvation. Understandable, no question. If you want your ock dirty, loud, and dangerous (though BRMC were only halfway believable when that was their image), you had better look somewhere else. If you want it thoughtful and passionate but still alive and realistic, then give Howl a chance. BRMC have grown up and grown interesting.

Howl + Bangkok: Haunted + Halloween
over 2 years ago
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Likelihood notwithstanding, if you ever find yourself wanting to go CD shopping whilst malling in Bangkok, I have a couple of things to say as a tourist.The ubiquitous CD Warehouses have unsurprisingly the biggest inventory and fastest turnover. By which I mean that, when you decide at any point to buy a CD, it takes as little effort to walk back to the last store as to go forward to the next s...

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Time won't save our souls...
about 1 year ago
Record Store Day
about 1 year ago
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I've been pretty busy this past week and am only just getting around to getting this posted. April 19th was Record Store Day and my wife Heather and I headed up from our Carolina home to Lexington KY where Peter Hayes and Robert Levon Been of Black Rebel Motorcycle Club did a fantastic unplugged free show in the parking lot of a record store called CD Central located just up the street from the...

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Black Rebel Motorcycle Club "Devils Waitin" Video
about 1 year ago
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I don't understand why some musicians make it and others don't. Its a crazy world. BRMC is one of those groups that I thought would break through because they had a different sound then most of the groups emerging at that time. BRMC came onto the scene when the strokes, libertines, and many others were garnering attention. They did sign with a major just like the others did. However, they were ...

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Black Rebel Motorcycle Club
over 2 years ago

Whew, that's a long name. Say that five times fast:) First song that I have ever heard by them. There is something about the guitar riff in the middle that I love..

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Mmmm, greasy
over 3 years ago
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From the very first sounds, I knew I would like this album. The vocals that lead off ??Shuffle Your Feet?? instantly put me in mind of "Alice in Chains":http://mog.com/music/Alice_In_Chains, for some reason, and I took that to be a good omen. The rock gods are indeed smiling on these guys, and they've channeled whatever black rebel hoodoo they've come across into one kick-ass album. One of...

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I think I need to Howl
over 3 years ago

Just got back to my job from smoking a jack and finding out the reason I have not gotten paid in 3 weeks is that the government is garnishing my wages, this little gem was waiting for me. There truely ain't no easy way out.

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Robert Been of BRMC’s Santiago Car Rooftop Performance
about 1 year ago

After a recent show in Santiago, Robert Been continued the performance by climbing on the roof of a car and performed 'Sympathetic Noose'. The crowd looks pretty dangerous as he is making his way through it, and then it calms down as soon as he gets up to sing. Pretty surreal.

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