The Kills - Keep on your mean side
... und noch ein weiteres Album von the Kills. Kann ich ebenfalls nur weiter empfehlen ...
On their
full-length debut, Keep on Your Mean Side, the Kills deliver on the promise of their Black Rooster EP, serving up more of their sneering, sexy
blues-punk with a little more polish and premeditation. It's easy to lump them
in with the current crop of garage rock revivalists -- and granted, the band
bears more than a passing resemblance to the White Stripes' bluesy sound and boy-girl lineup -- but Keep on Your Mean Side suggests that the Kills' true lineage comes from a darker, more poetic strain of rock.
Naturally, the Velvet Underground are a major influence, particularly on the
ominous, droning guitar work that forms the backbone of "Kissy
Kissy." On songs like "Superstition," shades of punk poetesses
like Chrissie Hynde, Patti Smith, and (especially) PJ Harvey color VV's sultry, commanding delivery, which is about as far from her work with
her former band, Discount, as it's possible to get with the same set of vocal cords. And on
"Fuck the People" and other charged duets between her and
guitarist/vocalist Hotel, the Kills have some of the Bonnie & Clyde romance
that made Royal Trux so great. The pair doesn't quite outdo their inspirations yet --
they're not as inventive, dramatic, or volatile as the aforementioned artists
-- but the Kills do combine these elements in a way that's
relatively fresh and distinctive. Keep on Your Mean Side includes re-recorded versions of three of the
best songs from Black Rooster: the "f*ck and fight" duet of the
title track; "Cat Claw," which boasts snarly VV vocals and even snarlier guitar licks from Hotel; and "Wait," a countrified, acoustic number that demonstrates
the band's range. These new versions -- recorded along with the rest of the
album at London's Toerag Studios -- are far from hi-fi, but miss the
recorded-in-the-basement quality that gave the originals more of an underground
feel. Though the album could use a bit more grit and grime, it's still
remarkably solid, with songs like the driven "Hitched" and the
surprisingly sweet "Gypsy Death & You" spanning the extremes of the Kills' sound and proving that Black Rooster was just a taste of what the band had to
offer. Likewise, Keep on Your Mean Side hints at greater heights (or scuzzier, more
elegantly wasted depths) that the Kills will hopefully scale on later albums.
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