Grinderman Grinderman 2 [Anti-]
Need to know: Grinderman is essentially a more stripped, unhinged version of Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds. Formed by Cave, Warren Ellis, Martyn P. Casey and Jim Sclavunos as a way to unlock their more primal rock’n’roll urges and liberate themselves from the Bad Seeds canon. Aside from the looseness and no holds barred attitude of the music, it’s Cave’s decision to pick up the guitar that distinguished Grinderman from the Bad Seeds most. The band released their self-titled debut album in March 2007, but returned to the Bad Seeds the next year to record and release Dig, Lazurus, Dig!!!. Grinderman 2 was recorded in August 2009 with Nick Launay, who also produced the first album.
In a 100 words or so: Like the threatening wolf that graces the cover, Grinderman 2 is one snarling, temperamental beast. Like its predecessor, Cave’s unguarded prose reveals this sexual predator persona, waxing about mid-life neuroses and triple-x urges through biting one-liners. On the slithering, skronking “Worm Tamer,” Nick boasts that “My baby calls me the Loch Ness Monster/Two great big humps and then I’m gone,” while on the sludgy blues of “Kitchenette,” he tries to woo a housewife with the line “What’s this husband of yours ever given to you?/Oprah Winfrey on a plasma screen?” For all of his lyrical double entendres and free-flowing zingers though, Cave’s lyrics are only as dangerous as his band. But he’s got three depraved souls behind him, not to mention himself clawing away at the guitar, to make this some of the dirtiest, unbalanced music since Cave’s first band, the debaucherous Birthday Party. But just when you think you have them pegged, Grinderman throw in the surprisingly spiritual and sophisticated “Palaces of Montezuma,” a song that can save any soul, even these four brutes.
Best track: “Worm Tamer”
R.I.Y.L. Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds, The Birthday Party, The Stooges
Rating: 8.5/10
Buy, download, steal or don’t bother: Buy.
Sample: “Heathen Child”
Website: Grinderman.com
Tags: Grinderman, nick cave, Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds
Posted in Reviews, The New Music | No Comments »
Six years is what it’s taken them but FINALLY L.A. shoegazers Autolux will follow up their 2004 debut Future Perfect with their ridiculously long-awaited second album. Transit Transit will see the light of day on August 3rd thanks to TBD Recordings. The album is described as a “deep and profound world in which to immerse yourself.”
Klaxons haven’t kept us waiting as long as Autolux, but it has been four years since they dropped the Mercury Prize-winning Myths of the Near Future and it’s felt like an eternity. Well, the band (now an official quartet) have given us a taste of what to expect over at their official site. “Flashover” doesn’t sound too drastically different, but you can definitely hear the guitars a lot more, thanks to nu-metal guru Ross Robinson’s production. Check it out.
If a new EP by psychedelic blues man Kurt Vile is exciting news to you, well, Matador Records is now giving it away for free until tomorrow. That’s right, grab your complimentary download of his Square Shells EP over here.
Speaking of freebies, you can also get a new FACT-commissioned mixtape by the one and only Ariel Pink, not to mention his crew in the Haunted Graffiti. Grab the link and the tracklisting of all the wonderfully weird tunes here.
Nick Cave’s other band, Grinderman, put out a wicked self-titled album back in 2007 and now they’re coming back to give us more of that “pussy blues” of theirs. Anti- will release the band’s second album, simply titled, Grinderman 2, on September 14th. Get ready…
Tags: Ariel Pink, Autolux, Grinderman, Haunted Graffiti, Klaxons, kurt vile, nick cave
Posted in News, The New Music | 1 Comment »