User Login

Wild Beasts: Limbo, Panto
Contributed By: Beyond 2000
Created On: Sunday, 15 June 2008
Hits: 112



Wild Beasts: Limbo, Panto
Limbo, Panto
The Leeds based, Kendal born four-piece Wild Beasts have created a collection of 10 beautiful, eccentric, very British tales that could be the most unique album you will hear this year. In another time and place, you imagine these dramatic sing-a-ling shanties could have been the fitting 'stiff upper lip' finale of the Titanic. They whisper of literary greats: the wit of Noel Coward, the wholesomeness of Wordsworth and the romance of Keats, as 'Heave-hos' and 'Cheerios' mix with modern day lyrics of 'chips with cheese', big matches and casual sex.

There's a natural and noble approach to pop music on display here folks; the rhythm of a firm hand shake, waltzing guitar gestures and the angelic vocal soaring of lead singer Hayden Thorpe offer a rare and disarming range and yet the new single 'The Devil's Crayon' sung by bassist Tom Fleming shows yet another magical dynamic to the band's talents. "The four boys of Wild Beasts aren't concerned with being of the modern, or being of the renaissance, being baggy pantsed or being light pantsed, being in a scene or being in a place. Wild Beasts' music, being what it is, just is".

So reads the inside cover of the promotional copy of their debut album, and I couldn't have said it better myself. It's even quite probable you'll even be able to remember where you were when you first heard the upward sweep of Hayden Thorpe's voice. I was on a bus in South London when this voice beamed in like a message from another planet, singing the first of many strangely uplifting titles, Vigil For A Fuddy Duddy. As they said, Wild Beasts make their very own sound - and it's completely dominated by the declamatory gestures of Thorpe, whose sheer power often makes him sound either like a 16th century castrato or the main character in a screwball musical. Thankfully he stops well short of the antics of the Blackadder theme but the technique is similar, a kind of cross between that and Stephin Merritt's Showtunes.

Yet the production, overseen by Cardigans and Franz Ferdinand producer Tore Johansson, is a fine achievement, finding a balance between the huge voice and the guitars, placing them essentially in a widescreen environment. The upshot is that you'll either love or hate the Wild Beasts, for in no way is this a voice you can sit on the fence and listen to. And certainly on songs like The Devil's Crayon, where the vocal melody swoons over jangling guitars, you can't help but get taken away by the sheer romanticism of the sound and the lyrical sentiments.

Elsewhere, though, the voice can grate and overpower if you're not in the right mood for it. Woebegone Wanderers, whose title indicates a song about a bottom of the table football team, goes through a cycle of recitative and chorus that, while well structured, needs a stage to bring it full justice. This is a brave and hugely ambitious record, projecting far beyond the limits of most bands in their early twenties today. It will always be a jar of Marmite where the listener is concerned, either loved or hated, but the fact it falls into its very own category should be unreservedly admired.

Download  Buy


Share this article to: Del.icio.us!Google!Live!Facebook!Technorati!StumbleUpon!Fark!Blogmarks!
Comments
Only registered users can write comments!

3.25 Copyright (C) 2007 Alain Georgette / Copyright (C) 2006 Frantisek Hliva. All rights reserved."

 
< Prev   Next >

Advertisers

Transparent Language
Place your ad here Place your ad here The Best Affiliate Network Chitika Mall Place your ad here Place your ad here Place your ad here Place your ad here Place your ad here Place your ad here Blog Directory Place your ad here Place your ad here Place your ad here Place your ad here