shop | mailing lists
musicOMH
music: album reviews
Interpol - Our Love To Admire (Parlophone)
UK release date: 9 July 2007
5 stars
Interpol - Our Love To Admire

buy this title


track listing

1. Pioneer To The Falls
2. No I In Threesome
3. Scale
4. Heinrich Maneuver
5. Mammoth
6. Pace Is The Trick
7. All Fired Up
8. Rest My Chemistry
9. Who Do You Think?
10. Wrecking Ball
11. Lighthouse
The most surprising thing about Our Love To Admire, once you're over the initial shocks of a) that willfully non-Interpolesque cover art and b) Carlos D's new varmint-chewing facial hair, is the fact that for the first time the band have cracked open the shades long enough to allow a few rays of light to penetrate the ever-gloomy world which they inhabit.

Granted, it isn't quite a complete change of weather - Most of Our Love To Admire is still draped in the same perma-drizzle atmosphere which throttled Turn On... and Antics - but when Paul Banks suddenly sounds borderline excited about "Giving something new a try" on No I In Threesome you do wonder if maybe, just maybe, they've started to find some fun in this rock stars lark. Or at the very least, in threesomes.

However, for each glimpse of a happier place there's still a shitload of foreboding waiting to bundle the good vibes up in a carpet and fling them off a bridge; it's hardly an album collecting glow sticks and boarding the bus bound for party-central. But then again, Interpol without the darkness would be like Editors with an original idea or The Fratellis' without a Leo Sayer lookalike upfront: unequivocally wrong.

It starts spectacularly. Pioneer To The Falls is a magnificently ominous thing, all skeletal guitar riffs writhing like landed eels, a rhythm section laying weighty footprints down in the back and Banks' spectral vocal floating wraith-like across the top. As a raspberry blown at those who speculated on the negative effects the move to major label backing may have produced, it's loud, long and pretty darn-tootin' decisive.

It's a archetypal Interpol song, albeit deeper, richer and more detailed than anything they've managed before. And that's a common thread. Something like Pace Is The Trick would have been good on Antics, but here it's extraordinary. Utterly sure-footed, utterly beguiling and hypnotically meticulous in the manner it slowly unfolds each section.

Lead single The Heinrich Maneuver crackles with the freed energy only known to those who have extracted themselves from a crappy relationship. Mammoth is mean, spiteful and delivered with mocking indifference by Banks. But for both, and indeed elsewhere, it's the way in which the elements of the track click into place with a Swiss watchmaker's precision and artistry that really hits home.

The tempo drops towards the end. They've always had a knack of closing things in suitably downbeat fashion and it's no different here. While Wrecking Ball swings a sad arc of despair with all the slow-building momentum of it's titular entity it's Lighthouse which really shows how far Interpol have come.

Washes of Daniel Kessler's shimmering guitars lap over solidly grandiose brass surfaces and Banks sings a torch song that peels back the taciturn veneer that normally cloaks his voice in icy detachment. Of course, it's cool as fuck, but there's a surprising amount of warmth in it too.

Pah. We leave Interpol alone for five minutes and they pull this trick on us. This isn't the same band we last saw in 2004. It's a louder, harder, bigger, bolder, smarter, happier, more confident, more innovative, better band then the one left behind. Screw the major label backing, screw the rumours of inter-band tension, Interpol are operating in another galaxy to the majority of those who claim to be their peers.

  share: 
Facebook | Digg | del.icio.us | more
Mercury Prize 2009 nominees
FLORENCE AND THE MACHINE SPEECH DEBELLE KASABIAN FRIENDLY FIRES
LA ROUX BAT FOR LASHES THE HORRORS GLASVEGAS
SWEET BILLY PILGRIM THE INVISIBLE LISA HANNIGAN LED BIB




out this week:
Julian Casablancas - Phrazes For The Young The Hidden Cameras - Origin: Orphan Weezer - Raditude
Luke Haines - 21st Century Man Espers - III Local Natives - Gorilla Manor
coming soon:
Martha Wainwright - Sans Fusils, Ni Souliers, a Paris Robbie Williams - Reality Killed The Video Star Mariah Carey - Memoirs Of An Imperfect Angel
Will Young - The Hits Joe Goddard - Harvest Festival The Pains Of Being Pure At Heart - Higher Than The Stars EP
recent releases:
Cheryl Cole - Three Words McAlmont & Nyman - The Glare Miike Snow - Miike Snow
Devendra Banhart - What Will Be Will Be Kings Of Convenience - Declaration Of Dependence Wolfmother - Cosmic Egg
Portico Quartet - Isla Annie - Don't Stop Whitney Houston - I Look To You
The Antlers - Hospice BEAK> - BEAK> Atlas Sound - Logos
Fuck Buttons - Tarot Sport The Flaming Lips - Embryonic Shakira - She Wolf
more album reviews
TOP ARTICLES NOW
GIG: Shirley Bassey dazzles Camden

GIG: HEALTH slay 30 minutes

MORE GIG REVIEWS: Maps, Smokey Robinson, Editors, iLiKETRAiNS, Dizzee Rascal, Doves, The Big Pink, Soap&Skin, Girls, Robbie Williams...

ALBUM: Cheryl Cole: 3 Words

FESTIVAL: In The City 2009

INTERVIEW: Miike Snow on deeply darkly danceable music and why cold is good

RELATED ARTICLES
ALBUM:
Interpol - Our Love To Admire

ALBUM:
Interpol - Antics

GIG:
Interpol @ Academy, Sheffield

GIG:
Interpol @ Alexandra Palace, London

GIG:
Interpol @ KOKO, London

GIG:
Interpol @ Octagon, Sheffield

GIG:
Interpol @ Scala, London

TRACK:
Interpol - The Heinrich Maneuver

TRACK:
Interpol - C' Mere

TRACK:
Interpol - Slow Hands

TRACK:
Interpol - Obstacle 1 Arthur Baker Remix

EXTERNAL LINKS
Interpol



  more album reviews...



musicOMH
about us
contact
copyright
home
elsewhere
Twitter
Facebook
Last.fm
Soundcloud
MySpace
© 1999-2009 OMH