Fri, Aug 29, 2003 - Page 19 News List

CD Reviews

By Gavin Phipps  /  STAFF REPORTER

Super Furry Animals

Phantom Power

Sony

Formed in Cardiff, Wales, in 1993 Super Furry Animals was one of the first post-alternative acts to successfully fuse together a number of contrasting musical genres. Be it power pop, punk, techno/dance or prog rock the Welsh quintet always manages to create melodic, flippant and artsy, yet highly pleasing music.

The band first hit the big time after its 1996 debut, Fuzzy Logic, eked its way into the UK Top 40. Since then the combo has released six albums, all of which have been almost faultless. Unlike the band's 2001 release, Rings Around the World -- an album on which Furry's sound was streamlined and its political stance simplified in order to break into the US market -- the combo's latest release, Phantom Power, sees the band going back to basics.

An excellent slow-rolling collection of supple songs with intertwining neo-psychedelic influences, Phantom Power is Pet Sounds meets Magical Mystery Tour.

Encompassing country-rock, electronica, pop and a 1960s feel the album is packed with superb harmonies and sugar coated guitar hooks. From the off, and the slow rolling opener, Hello Sunshine, the band is out to conquer the listener with its laid back mellow dreaminess and delight and amuse with its trademark left-wing lyrical cadence.

Numbers such as Liberty Belle and Golden Retriever are smooth foot tapping giants, Sex, War and Robots is pure Valium-soaked psychedelic brilliance and Out Of Control is a masterly piece of guitar-laden angst. It's the quasi-California sound of Piccolo Snare and Venus and Serena however, which give Phantom Power its fantastically agreeable flavor.

Killing Joke

Killing Joke

Zuma

One of a multitude of punk bands discovered by BBC Radio 1 DJ, John Peel in the late 1970s, Killing Joke's ability to shift from hard-edged metal/punk based tunes to slow hypnotic tribal numbers set the four-piece apart from many of its Bar E focused peers.

Not that the sizable following of more dance-responsive punk rockers saw the band shy away from its hardcore and controversial roots. The tongue-in-cheek cover art for the combo's Laugh? I Nearly Bought One featuring a photograph of the Pope blessing Nazi stormtroopers, led to the combo being banned from several UK venues.

Releasing its eponymous debut in 1981, a revamped Killing Joke recently released its second self-titled album. Killing Joke sees the reformed combo incorporating dance styled synthesizer lines with sinister buzzsaw guitar riffs and some suitably intense tribal drumming by guest, ex- Nirvana and Foo Fighter, Dave Grohl.

More aggressive than its mid-1980s chart-making material such as Fire Dances and Eighties, Killing Joke has returned to the fury and focus of its early days. Producing an album packed with tribal influence and heavy political rhetoric.

Various

The Music Remains the Same

Locomotive

While large numbers of tribute albums would be better used as beer mats, Frisbees or even ashtrays, Locomotive Music's recent tribute to Zed Zeppelin, The Music Remains the Same, is one of the few to warrant more than immediate demotion to the trash can.

The 10th official Zeppelin tribute album to be released since the creators of modern metal split up, The Music Remains the Same features a collection of Led Zeppelin covers by what are predominantly European heavy/death/black metal acts.

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