The Decemberists: Hazards Of Love

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The Decemberists: The Hazards Of Love (Capitol, 2009)

I suppose the big question is that why I keep buying The Decemberists albums if I don’t like them anymore. Maybe I want to believe.  I want to believe that I could love them like I once did. Unfortunately it just isn’t happening. The only thing that reminds me of the good old days is Colin Meloy’s voice. That voice still sounds totally brilliant. Unfortunately the music is nowadays over-ambitious and pompous. Why not just write songs, who needs some freakin’ folk rock opera.  The saddest thing is that some of the songs could be great but the larger than life arrangements destroy them. For example The Wanting Comes in Waves / Repaid starts beautifully, but it soon gets unbearable. There’s a couple of great songs that don’t get out of hand. Annan Water is a really wonderful song and The Hazards of Love 4 (The Drowned) is almost equally great. Isn’t it a Lovely Night? and The Rake’s Song are also really good and end up on the positive side.  A few others are okay, but about half of Hazards of Love is just way too pompous and almost unlistenable. However, I’m probably not the target audience for this. I prefer small things and a man and a guitar is usually a perfect combination for me. If you’re looking for some ambitious folk opera, The Hazards of Love might indeed be a good album for you. I rather listen to simple pop songs or let some dude with a guitar sing me a heartfelt story about the various ways he has broken his own heart than spend anymore time with this mammoth.

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The Micragirls: Wild Girl Walk

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The Micragirls: Wild Girl Walk (Bone Voyage, 2009)

Just fantastic! I knew I was going to buy this, I knew I was going to like this, but I had no idea that this would be so freakin’ marvellous.  Before Wild Girl Walk I felt that they were a bit one dimensional garage rock band. Always able to get the party going on and being a whole lot of fun to listen to, but still nothing to be truly excited about.  Then came the first preview from the new album in form of the single Summer’s Gone. It blew me away and send shockwaves through my spine. The Micragirls with pop sensibility. Whoah! I’m instantly in love.

Now after hearing the whole album, my love has  grown to sky high levels. I was a little bit afraid that Summer’s Gone might be one-off attempt on softer sounds, but thankfully I was wrong and there’s a lot more flavours, colours and variation on Wild Girl Walk than on the debut. Old fans don’t need to worry either. The garage rock side is still going strong and there’s several killer rock tunes like I Know, Electric Chair Twist and Girl Go Crazy. Stunning 60’s girl band influenced pop moments are in the minority, but they are utterly wonderful and give you some breathing space on this rock’n’roll rocket. It’s probably a good thing that the pop moments are in the minority. If I would get a whole record of stuff that sound like Summer’s Gone, Story of Two and the Wanda Jackson cover Funnel Of Love, I probably would go insane. It would be too much love,  I couldn’t take it, I would have to pass it on to someone else. Wild Girl Walk is a fantastic rock’n’roll record.

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The Munsons: Go With The Flow

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The Munsons: Go With The Flow (Mufarang, 2009)

The Munsons are two finnish guys Tokela and Tommi Viksten. They spent so much time listening to old country boogie, rockabilly, hillbilly and honky tonk vinyls that they wanted to start making their own versions of the songs. Things moved on and soon they found themselves in Woodstock, recording a cover album at Levon Helm’s studio. The result of the recordings is this beautiful album Go With The Flow. I’m not familiar with all the originals, but most of them are old country and rockabilly favourites. The odd couple being Rough Boy (ZZ Top) and Go With The Flow (The Queens of The Stone Age). Rough Boy is especially a gorgeous version and reveals the beautiful core of the song that the 80’s production partly destroyed in the original.  Other favourites are There’ll Never Be Anyone Else But You, Home Of The Blues, Go With The Flow and Let Me Love You. The guitars sound great and the harmonies sound even greater, but I still keep one heart hidden until they deliver an album full of The Munsons originals.

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