Review: Gigwise 4.5 Stars

Started by LaurieBlue, Sep 24, 2005, 05:02 AM

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LaurieBlue

http://www.gigwise.com/contents.asp?contentid=8725


My Morning Jacket - 'Z' (RCA) Released 17/10/05  
 
by Janne Oinonen  More Rock...  

'It Still Moves', announced the title of My Morning Jacket's 2003 major label debut, and the Louisville, Kentucky five-piece remain determined to push things forward. On their fourth album 'Z' My Morning Jacket very rarely sound like anything you've heard before - including their previous output.

Initially some of the new reference points leave this listener dumbfounded. Whatever you expected My Morning Jacket to be capable of, that almost certainly did not include joining the ska revival. Yet this is what they're up to on 'Off The Record', although the likes of the Ordinary Boys might struggle the match the track's hypnotic space-rock coda. The righteously ramshackle racket of 'What A Wonderful Man', meanwhile, is the unlikely sound of the band getting with the garage rock revolution. It rocks like a bastard.

Allow it while to sink in, and 'Z' emerges the exciting sound of a band discovering their full creative potential. 'Wordless Chorus' sets the experimental mood. The slinky funk groove at the song's foundation is a dramatic departure from the band's trademark southern rock chug, but the real surprise is hearing Jim James's vocals in the nude, shorn of their usual thick reverb coating. 'It Beats for You' is even more superlative-exhausting. Powered by frenetic bursts of drumming and simplest of acoustic guitar figures, this might just be the enormous yet intimate sound Coldplay and their bland-out ilk have been striving for - a pulsating, breathtaking track equally fit for plucking heartstrings and filling every inch of an enormodome.

Elsewhere, 'Anytime' is the kind of an infectious good-time rock gallop that should spread My Morning Jacket's gospel far beyond their core congregation, while the raw riffage of 'Lay Low' and 'Dondante', a majestic, epic eulogy, offer solace to fans puzzled by the new sense of sonic adventurism by proving that MMJ hasn't kicked those much-loved jams out entirely. A spot of soothing calm comes courtesy of 'Knot Comes Loose', an achingly beautiful summit of pedal-steel powered country-folk and swaying tropicalia rhythms.      
      
"We are the innovators, they are the imitators," declares Jim James on 'Wordless Chorus'. A bold statement, but 'Z' proves that the man is spot on. Named after the final letter in the alphabet, 'Z', fittingly, is the last word in exhilarating rock 'n' roll invention.

primushead

Great...another article that makes the wait for 'z' seem longer ;)

Clarkwork

"Named after the final letter in the alphabet, 'Z', fittingly, is the last word in exhilarating rock 'n' roll invention. "

Could there be a hidden meaning to this title?  Could it be a sign that this is there final record?  I hope not, but what if?
If you don't know for yourself, how could you ever know for me....

EC

Quote"Named after the final letter in the alphabet, 'Z', fittingly, is the last word in exhilarating rock 'n' roll invention. "

Could there be a hidden meaning to this title?  Could it be a sign that this is there final record?  I hope not, but what if?
This is the third or fourth time I've heard this rumour.  Is there anything that it's founded in?

primushead

I don't think this is their last album.  They wouldn't have recruited 2 new members just to do a couple tours and make one more album...or would they ???

peanut butter puddin surprise

c'mon.  last album?  are you kidding?  
Runnin' from somethin' that isn't there

dragonboy

I don't think so.
Read the short interview with Jim in Mojo. Sounds to me like the band is in a good place.
God will forgive them. He'll forgive them and allow them into Heaven.....I can't live with that.