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The Black Keys - Attack and Release

attackandrelease.jpg

It can be an all-too-common occurrence for those whose musical tastes extend beyond, or completely avoid, commercial radio, that a band who one champions as underappreciated gets the recognition they deserve… but for the wrong album! And then subsequently tours ad nauseam until releasing another album to a fickle public who may or may not care anymore. Too many examples spring to mind, but my elitist and ultimately meaningless point is that while I was worried the same fate laid waiting for The Black Keys with 2006’s Magic Potion, I was thankfully wrong. It’s not that MP wasn’t a good album, it just wasn’t the album (see; Rubber Factory), but now with their latest release I can rest calmly with the assurance that The Black Keys’ (Dan Auerbach and Patrick Carney) upward trajectory is analogous with the mastery that is Attack and Release.

The lion’s share of press surrounding Attack and Release has focused on the Ike Turner and Danger Mouse elements (they wrote many of the songs for a collaboration with the former and the latter produced it), but for the most part A&R is pure Black Keys. There are some bits and pieces that standout as likely Danger Mouse influences such as the eerie staccato piano and ghostly backing choir on “Psychotic Girl”, as well as the flute on “Same Old Thing”, but the parts never compromise the whole.

“All You Ever Wanted” opens A&R, and is solemnly beautiful with its ambling rhythm and fatigued vocals, reminiscent of life’s work-a-day monotony. The heyday of Vanguard and its Mississippi bluesmen are clear influences on many of Auerbach and Carney’s songs (checkout their Chulahoma EP), though not always in as obvious of a way as here. The first single, “Strange Times”, might just be the most classic Keys cut from the album, with its raw formula of fuzzed-out guitar and a pummeling hat-kick-snare blitz that never lets up.

In further homage to the quintessence of the band’s musical roots, we get an A and B-side of “Remember When”. More than a titular trick, the two songs provide a duality or day and night extension that often exists in many songs but isn’t regularly explored in such a simple manner, and ultimately it is the simplicity of The Black Keys that provides the power in their music. Fittingly the album closer, “Things Ain’t Like They Used To Be”, one of A&R’s simplest songs, is one of its most potent.

Writing this upon my return from the band’s sold-out performance at the Wiltern, a long way from mowing lawns in Ohio, things indeed ain’t like they used to be.

Check out the laseriffic video for “Strange Times”.

Attack and Release is out now, get it from: Insound CD (LP) | Amazon CD(MP3) | iTunes


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