The Black Keys

Started by Space Sweeper, Oct 11, 2011, 09:01:33 PM

Author
The Black Keys (Read 7,377 times)

Space Sweeper


SpaceMarines


Keg

Wow they didnt waste time after Brother.

SpaceMarines


Space Sweeper

awww yeah! It's so good, I've been listening to it for the past 3 days.

SpaceMarines

Same. I'm just "Oh, the song's over? Refresh."

Space Sweeper


SpaceMarines

THE WAIT! THE EXCRUCIATING WAIT!

Space Sweeper

Patrick Carney's fingahs after a nice recording session:

Spoiler


[close]

SpaceMarines

Holy shit. I've gotten a blister or two before, but just... holy shit.

I'm feeling a bizarre jealousy at the moment.

Space Sweeper

Another brilliant album!

My favorites are Nova Baby, Sister, and Gold on the Ceiling.

Shasvre

Just listened to a few songs by Black Keys. There's been a lot of talk about them on the Galaxy and I wanted to see what all the fuzz waz about. While the songs I tried out were pretty good, it wasn't something I immediately fell in love with, like I've done with some other bands. I will say that Tighten Up was pretty enjoyable though.

Keg

Excellent album but theyre getting increasingly safer with their music. Wether thats a deliberate attempt to get more airplay and be more accessible or its purely by chance I dont know. Four years ago I said to a friend that The Black Keys are what Kings Of Leon could have been if they hadnt turned all stadium pop (not that they give a shit because theyve made millions from it). Now it seems Black Keys are slowly turning into that ever since Rubber Factory.

However, pop sell outs or not, this shits awesome!

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a_426RiwST8#ws

Space Sweeper

A great, short review that sums up my opinions on the album very well:

http://www.avclub.com/articles/the-black-keys-el-camino,66093/

QuoteThe Black Keys have always had a little Bad Company in them, even back when they were jamming on Junior Kimbrough songs in small clubs. All it took to expose the band's arena-rock side was a series of actual arena gigs, which finally happened with 2010's Brothers, one of the few rock records of the 21st century to get within spitting status of platinum status. El Camino is the first Black Keys record made for the band's newly expanded audience, and it's been properly fine-tuned for maximum impact amid massive crowds.

Frequent collaborator Danger Mouse is back as producer after overseeing Brothers' breakout hit "Tighten Up" and 2008's transitional LP Attack And Release, the record that first nudged the Black Keys in a poppier, less blooze-centric direction. El Camino distills the previous two records' approach down to 38 minutes of lean, mean, consistently catchy riffs and big, chant-worthy choruses. The rock-star confidence is palpable in "Money Maker," which blows out the band's usual soulful rock with a wrecking-ball beat. "Hell Of A Season" dabbles in post-punk crunch and slippery reggae shuffles, but otherwise, El Camino resides in a comfort zone of classic-rock worship: The power-pop nugget "Nova Baby" takes a page from Cheap Trick's late-'70s playbook, and "Gold On The Ceiling" powers forward like ZZ Top with a T. Rex engine.

If El Camino fails to produce a hit on par with "Tighten Up," it won't be for lack of trying. "Lonely Boy" and "Stop Stop" are instantly likeable pop songs that should fit comfortably between Foo Fighters and Kings Of Leon tracks on the local rock radio station. El Camino is so relentlessly crowd-pleasing that it feels a bit inconsequential; there's no room for the sad, sludgy ballads that used to anchor Black Keys albums in the band's new, sugar-heavy music. But when times are as good as they are El Camino, the blues can wait for another day.

Keg

Bang on review.

AvPGalaxy: About | Contact | Cookie Policy | Manage Cookie Settings | Privacy Policy | Legal Info
Facebook Twitter Instagram YouTube Patreon RSS Feed
Contact: General Queries | Submit News