Wednesday, November 11, 2009

WK30 - Wolfmother - Cosmic Egg (8)


Released - 10/23/09
Label - Modular Recordings

BLURB - For whatever reason, everyone is killing, 'Cosmic Egg.' Granted, the band established themselves as one of the preeminent rock acts after releasing their critically acclaimed, self-titled debut over three years ago - so I guess everyone has gigantic expectations for this album. Wolfmother's second release is exactly what it should be, especially considering that 2/3 of the band left, over 'creative differences' this past year. With the new lineup comes a slightly newer and more refined sound. This record has less of a 'classic' feel and takes more musical risks. While 'Cosmic Egg' is not everything it could be, it still stands up to the Wolfmother brand and is a progressive next step for the band.

Rating - 8 out of 10

FULL STORY - Alright...second straight blog entry coming from a bus. This needs to end. There's something to be said when the only free time I have, comes on a bus. Oh well.

I'm a huge fan of jinxes. In 2008 when the Phillies (by the way I'm a huge Phillies fan) beat the Rays in to the World Series, I picked the Rays in a genius reverse-jinx-scheme. This year, trying to further my insanity, I went for the reverse-reverse-jinx, by actually thinking the 'Phils could handle the Yankees...but it was too much. Philadelphia was crushed.

So here's where I'm going with this jinx talk. The publishing company I work for actually administers the copyrights for Wolfmother's debut disc, but a few months ago, the group's agreement ended and they relocated to another publisher. I was furious on many different levels. Part of me wants Wolfmother to kind of flop now. Or at least stumble a bit. Another part wants the (now) quartet to flourish, as they are genuinely one of the great acts out there. What to do?

There was a point when I was just starting to dive into the Wolfmother repertoire and a synchronization license for the band's material to be used in South Park came across my desk. Heaven. One of my favorite bands, getting placed in one of my favorite shows, with my company reaping the benefits. One year later, the band breaks up and gets new members, releases a new album and leaves my company. Objectivity may be at a premium here, but let's see what can be drummed up. I'm torn, but I'll lean Wolfmother.

The first track 'California Queen' is a fuzzy, dizzying whirlwind of an opener. There is a hypnotizing, albeit monotonous, two note riff that constitutes much of this song. All of the Wolfmother staples appear to be here...the fast tempo, heavy distortion and Stockdale's voice, which he is borrowing from Robert Plant. So we're three for three...should be a great song, no? For whatever reason, there is an absolutely terrible, poorly placed 'B' section that sucks all of the momentum out of the song. It's slow and awkard, giving what we all thought was an uptempo track at the beginning, a Jekyll and Hyde identity complex.

'New Moon Rising' is the single and has been used quite a bit in the film and televison world. The riff friendly track sounds exactly like a Wolfmother single should sound like. Stockdale nails the vocals and the drums, for some reason, sound even harder than normal on this song. This song kind of reminds me of 'Dimension' from their first disc.

The third track 'White Feather' shows the most growth and progression for Wolfmother. 'White Feather,' while one of the slower tracks, has a nicely understated blues tone, channeling a Rolling Stones-esque feel, from their prime. There is a screeching, in-your-face guitar solo during the bridge that will makes you want to go out and buy a wah pedal. It's that good. The whole song, is that good. You can hear the drum beat play with the rhythm guitar during the verses, offering a clever back-and-forth jarring of sounds. Sounding not of this era, but maybe the late 60's, 'White Feather' will end up be a classic Wolfmother tune.

The epic journey that is 'In the Castle' is the best and most creative song on 'Cosmic Egg.' I'm really inclined to make a 'Stairway to Heaven' comparison but I can't. It's too soon. People wouldn't see my point. But here's what I will say...On this piece, Stockdale really shifts a lot of the attention to the lyrics, creating a mythical tale about entering into the 'Kingdom of the Sun.' Stockdale has always used weird imagery with his lyrics, as if nobody told him it was almost 2010. He often uses classical connotations to help shape our interpretation of how he sees his songs. I would need more than two hands to count how many Wolfmother cuts reference castles, gypsies, horses, thieves or other odd folklore. Well, he is from Australia....is that enough reason? For what it's worth and as weird as it is, I think it works, and it's consistent. This gives their Wolfmother a 'Led Zepplin,' larger than life feel. It's unfair to make this comparison, but it's too obvious not to.

Back to 'In the Castle.' This song does a great job at switching tempo and velocity, while always maintaining forward momentum. When you need to hear Stockdale, the music's temperament is steady and thought provoking. When there is a shift with the feel of the vocals, the guitars and bass kick into distortion, emphasizing whatever line Stockdale is screaming. By the end of the song there is so much energy and fury stored up, that it spills up into one of the best outros I've heard in a while. You're definitely glad you stuck around for this nearly six minute track.

Much of this record sounds very similar to the four tracks described above, and there really aren't any true stand outs. A lot of times I judge a record on how it sounds as a whole, played front to back. With Wolfmother I find I use the opposite strategy. As a fan of their music, I really look for that smash, epic, rocking, other-wordly, track. That's their M.O. There were about five essential hits on their first record - there is maybe one on 'Cosmic Egg.'

Creatively and maturity wise, the album as a whole is better than their debut. There is more variety and risk. It's not difficult to hear tangible examples of their growth and evolution, as a band. There is much more tone and color to their music. They are going in the right direction, but 'Cosmic Egg' is definitely a 'two steps forward, one step back' sophomore attempt. Be that as it may - it will still rock you hard. Probably harder than you thought it could.

Tracks
1.) California Queen
2.) New Moon Rising
3.) White Feather
4.) Sundial
5.) In the Morning
6.) 10,000 Feet
7.) Cosmic Egg
8.) Far Away
9.) Pilgrim
10.) In the Castle
11.) Phoenix
12.) Violence of the Sun

No comments:

Post a Comment