Monday, January 19, 2009

The Raveonettes - Lust Lust Lust

Happy 200th Birthday Edgar Allan Poe!



As long as we're on the topic. rocky says: I Been a fan of noise for so long I wouldn't recognize a dulcet tone if it waved up and lovingly caressed my inner ear. Distortion, twang, reverb, echo etc. Fuzz it up already. White noise, black noise, I don't discriminate nohow. As for this here slab-o-virtual-black-vinyl, think early Jesus and Mary Chain with a little more surf guitar and sumptuous sonic Spector swooshes. Last two minutes of the first track alone is worth the price of your precious time.

One Utterly Charming (Dark Danish Duo).


allmusic: The Raveonettes third album Lust Lust Lust is the sound of a band rescuing their career from the clutches of cliché and rediscovering the magic that made them so exciting on their debut Chain Gang of Love.


The opening track "Aly, Walk with Me" serves notice that things are going to be a lot different, the menacing prowl of the verses giving way to a deafening burst of white light/white heat noise halfway through the song.


Anyone fearing that Lust Lust Lust would be another record lost to over-production and slickness should, once they regain their hearing, be ecstatic. The duo recapture the fire, mystery, and dirty glamour of their early records and add a sharper melodic sense on a batch of songs that will stick to you like a sharp knife between the ribs.


Tracks like the thrillingly bleak yet devastatingly pretty "Dead Sound," the swaying "The Beat Dies," and the classically melodic "Black Satin" are as good as anything the band has done to date (and frankly, compare quite ably to the work of their most obvious influence, the Jesus and Mary Chain).


Sune Rose Wagner took over the production task from Richard Gottherer and stripped away all remnants of the glossy hack job they did on Pretty in Black. Throughout the record, the reverb is so heavy it might make you woozy, the drums clatter like trash can lids, and the vocals struggle to make it through the layers of haze but Wagner's light touch and newfound sense of restraint means the arrangements sound fully realized and if not three-dimensional, a very strong two.


Sharin Foo's vocals sounds as glacial and, as ever, Wagner's guitar melodies are note perfect (check his work on "Blitzed" for a short lesson on how to do a lot with only a few notes) and the two of them appear as reassuringly unwholesome as ever. Happy about it even, as they sing of being tied to evil hearts, black lollipops, and death by deceit in their sweet and unconcerned voices.


Lust Lust Lust should have been the follow up to Chain Gang of Love; Pretty in Black can just be considered a mistake, and fans of the fuzzy, decadent and over-driven version of the Raveonettes can be happy that they have their band back; nastier, prettier and better than ever.



1 comment:

Steve said...

The two MP3-only EPs that followed are even better! (And the third, Xmas-focused one is interesting as well.)

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