.
Music
Volume 18 - Issue 863 - CD Review
Search: Music

May 2008
S M T W T F S
11 12 13 14 15 16 17
18 19 20 21 22 23 24
25 26 27 28 29 30 31
1 2 3 4 5 6 7
8 9 10 11 12 13 14
15 16 17 18 19 20 21
Click a date to search for Music events on that day.
Full Calendar Search
.
Related Links
Internet Links:

Blurspace

Virgin Records: Blur

Also in this Issue
More CD Review Articles
Email Newsletter

Stay up-to-date with City Pages. Signing up is simple, and you can opt out anytime. Give it a try...

Sign Up Now
or
See a Sample Newsletter

.

Blur

by Roni Sarig
June 18, 1997

Blur
(Virgin)

LESS IS MORE. Or is that always true? Blur sure think so. With their latest self-titled release, the thinking man's Brit-poppers strip down the excess of 1994's Parklife and 1995's The Great Escape--both wonderfully satiric Polaroids of London lives. Now, apparently, the inspiration flows from the other side of the Atlantic: Name-checking both Pavement and Beck in recent interviews, Blur's lead singer/songwriter Damon Albarn raves about indie America's talent and experimentalism.

"I feel Heavy Metal," Albarn sarcastically screams on "Song 2," a parody of the grunge revolution Blur also railed against on their critically heralded commercial flop Modern Life is Rubbish way back in 1993. But where that album was ripe with a Mod sensibility--clean lines, sharp tunes, and impeccable design--Blur is a reinvention. Rougher, noisier, and less centered on character studies, it's closer to the band's debut, Leisure, than anything they've recorded since. But unlike that album's juvenile lyrics and bonhomie, new songs like "Chinese Bombs" and "On Your Own" are jaded and raw.

Blur's newly aggressive, guitar-based assault deconstructs the string, brass, and keyboard-centered approach of their most recent glories, an approach that proved to be simultaneously catchy and precious. They've apparently asked themselves the hard questions--like, how many horn breaks are too many horn breaks--and reformed their ways. Which proves (yet again) that it's hard to get the best of both worlds with Blur. When you want sweet, melodic pop they throw a wrench into the plans. And vice versa. (Matt Keppel)

Advertisement

Blur perform June 25 at First Avenue; call 338-8388.

About Roni Sarig
From the Archive
What do you think?
  • E-MAIL this story to a friend (or a foe!)
  • WRITE a letter to the editor
  • READ letters to the editor
  • PRINT this story in a more printer-friendly format
City Pages E-Mail Newsletter

Stay up-to-date with City Pages. Signing up is simple, and you can opt out anytime. Give it a try...

Advertising Info