Thursday, October 02, 2008

Bloc Party - Intimacy

2008
Vice Records
Buy (Amazon.com)

8/10

So, you know that band Bloc Party? Yeah, they're back.

Many fans, myself included, were hesitant upon hearing the Mercury single, which further showcased Kele Okereke's electronic fetish. I mean, yeah, I'm into electronica as much as the next guy, but Bloc Party was a rock band when I fell in love with them. I don't know if I would have found this new sound as interesting as the quirky electro-rock of Silent Alarm. Luckily, my fear has not yet been realized.

In many ways, this album picks up where their debut left off. It starts with "Ares", full of chanted call-and-response, wild guitar, and loud, enthusiastic drums (things with which Silent Alarm brimmed). More on the tail-end of the album, the softer slow-burn of "Signs" falls somewhere between "So Here We Are" and "This Modern Love", and closer "Ion Square" could be described as breathtaking. After the massive disappointment of A Weekend In The City, it would seem that Bloc Party have found themselves again.

Sure, the band still has some work to do: the repetitive nature of "Mercury" borders on obnoxious, and the long-winded, sparse atmospherics of "Biko" left me less than enthused. But Bloc Party have made considerable strides, most notably in their crafting of an album that flows from start to finish. Even Silent Alarm felt bloated at times, stalling and losing momentum in its midsection; Intimacy has no such problem.

This is a captivating record that successfully blends sampled beats, lush orchestration, a baroque sensibility, and straight-up rock, to form a concoction that is a radical departure from their too-weird-for-its-own-good A Weekend In The City. As such, Intimacy is more of a return to form than anything, really.

There is no doubt in my mind. Bloc Party is back.


Key Tracks (click to download):
Zephyrus
Trojan Horse


1 comment:

  1. This was a lot better than I thought after a few listens. I heard recently that 'Silent Alarm' was Gordon's influences, 'A Weekend In The City' was Russell's influences, this new one was Matt's. That means the next one is full of Kele's influences. After 'Flux', it's Kele's album I'm really worried about!

    Nice review!

    Rory. x

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