Having first made its reputation as a touring band, the trick with an act like the Arctic Monkeys is how much of that charisma and interactive magic can really be captured on the CD. These frigid simians have prided themselves on being a band you really move and dance to and yes, this is not your slick, R&B dance routines, but more the frenzied pogo-ing that Punk spawned. Its high energy, rock-dance beats and astute socially trenchant lyrics all rolled into one package. I Bet You Look Good on the Dancefloor has the wonderful line of "No Montagues and Capulets/ Just banging tunes and DJ sets."
Theres a noticeable funk, hip-hop influence at work here, but transposed to a rock idiom (if you can believe that). Always guitar-driven, the lead vocalist, Alex Turner, at times seems to be singing through a megaphone, ruminating on nicotine, alcohol and coffee-fueled late nights. Riot Van is about underage drinking and cop-baiting, but ending up in a beating. And on A Certain Romance, Turner takes a dig at the relationship between music and the new technology, "Theres only music so thats theres new ringtones."
Sheffield Englands Arctic Monkeys may not be the Second (or Third) Coming of The Beatles; but in an era when hype so often overtakes the product, its great to see an excellent bar band rise above the heap and give notice that they have arrived.
There were earlier Placebo albums that had more than a passing nod to the electronica trend, but on this latest outing, theres a stark and (for the band) minimalist ambiance. But despite the stripped down quality of this CDs music, the essence of Placebo remains a constant. One of the more successful bands of the last 10 years, but generally operating under the radar of high-profile music publications, Placebo fans are already hailing this album as one of the classics of this bands discography.
The title track, Meds, Space Monkey and especially Follow the Cops Back Home and Pierrot the Clown are my current favorite tracks. Placebo is not the kind of band you may take to at first listen. They grow on you, and you appreciate the texture they put into their songs and arranging. Its like discovering an REM thats operating within a more straightforward rock idiom. There are snatches of dabbling in electronica haunting the music; but by and large, its Rock, with what seems to be like, a lot of Industrial Engineering/Art School influence.