Album Results
Album Reviews
After almost five years, the vile, nasty, spunk-filled world of Placebo has refused to go away. Marilyn Manson has turned a satirical eye on his own media status and even Suede have since come to swoon over girls "shaped like a cigarette." Yet it's Brian Molko that's steered his band from premature randiness (Placebo) to fearful regrouping (Without You I'm Nothing) without once batting a makeup-smeared eyelash. Black Market Music finds Molko in such moody lust that his strangled, androgynous wailing rivals anything the band has previously flashed to the world. Whether it's the dripping, slithery punk circle of songs like "Black Eyed" or the choir-boy enthusiasm of others like "Special K" (strangely echoing Midnight Oil's "Warakurna"), Placebo seem to have finally found that sweet wet spot between beauty and perversion. Even at its worst (the "Block Rockin' Beats"-sampling "Taste in Men"), past glories sometimes fail to be repeated with at least grand, postcoital contentment. Because it's hard to hate an album with such fascinating softer touches. In one moment, Molko cries respect to his mother; in another he counsels, "You better keep it in check/Or you'll end up a wreck/And you'll never wake up" -- a paternal warning seemingly directed at his fellow hedonists. Of course, there's a thin line between trying to perfect old efforts and stumbling into laughable self-parody. But Placebo now seem more in control than they ever have before. The spectacular "Commercial for Levi," for example, is some perverted, weary take on a childhood lullaby, only one written in a parallel dimension about "spunk and bestiality." True, there's no "Nancy Boy" or "Pure Morning," yet the album's consistency easily outmatches even the highest watermarks of either predecessor. This is a dank, lusty moment in the band's career that is about as good as Placebo "mark 1" can go. They now have the talent, the intelligence, and the distorted arousal to possibly become unstoppable. It's only a matter of time before they finally find love amid the lust. ~ Dean Carlson, All Music Guide
Track Listing
| 1. Taste In Men |
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| 2. Days Before You Came |
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| 3. Special K |
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| 4. Spite And Malice |
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| 5. Passive Aggressive |
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| 6. Black-Eyed |
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| 7. Blue American |
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| 8. Slave To The Wage |
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| 9. Commercial For Levi |
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| 10. Haemoglobin |
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| 11. Narcoleptic |
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| 12. Peeping Tom |
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| Featured Review | |
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Greatest Day Take That |
| It's almost 10 years to the day that Robbie Williams released 'Angels' onto an unsuspecting British public and all at once established himself as one of the 90's most successful solo artists. Leaving his former Take That band mates in the dust, they embarked on unsuccessful DJ careers, below average indie projects and misguided acting jaunts. How fortunes have changed. Whilst Robbie resides alone in L.A. addicted to Red Bull, Marlboro Reds and UFO websites, Take That have re-emerged as one of Europe's most successful pop acts; on the verge of releasing an new album and undertaking a sell-out stadium tour. On latest release, 'Greatest Day', Garry Barlow takes a rest from writing hits for the likes of Peter Kaye, Lee Mead and John Barrowman and hands over some of the creative responsibility to Mark, Jason and Howard. The result is a mid-tempo, piano and guitar driven effort that could easily be filed, along with Coldplay and Snow Patrol, in the inoffensive pop rock section. In many ways the song is merely a preamble to the upcoming tour and just in time for Christmas album, 'Circus', to be released on 1st December. 'Greatest Day' proves that whilst nostalgia is still a major factor of Take That's appeal they, unlike many other reformed groups, are still capable of writing songs that stand up to their earlier work | |
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