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REVIEWS:
Bad Timing
Arena Rock Recording Company, 2003
Pop
Matters
4/8/2003
http://www.popmatters.com/music/reviews/g/grandmal-bad.shtml
The
title of the new album by retro-rockers Grand Mal couldn't be
more fitting. The New York City band has specialized in bringing
back the classic hard rock sounds of the early '70s for the past
seven years, but thanks to some dumb luck, such as releasing their
second album more than a year before the big New York rock renaissance
broke out in 2001, their music happened to go unnoticed by scenesters.
Now, four years after their last album, they've come around once
more, this time, just as the massive hype has started to wane,
with good bands like The Strokes and the Yeah Yeah Yeahs starting
to lose their initial luster in the eyes of trend-followers. So
yeah, Bad Timing is a hilariously apt title for this
new Grand Mal album.
Led
by singer/songwriter/guitarist/keyboardist Bill Whitten, and supported
by a lineup of band members that has constantly rotated over the
years, Grand Mal sound, and look, like they've come straight from
the grimy streets of New York City 30 years ago, channeling the
best music from that pre-punk era. Their sound seems like one
that's been done before by countless bar bands, but as you listen
to them, you begin to hear some variety in each song, interesting
little hints of other sounds that keep things from getting too
monotonous. Produced by Dave Fridmann (he of Flaming Lips, Mercury
Rev, and Sparklehorse fame), Bad Timing is a very solid
rock 'n' roll record that, despite recycling sounds that we've
heard so many times before, still manages to sound fresh and energetic.
The
rollicking "1st Round K.O." kicks things off with its
cool Stones riff, some great background singers, and some fabulously
hedonistic lyrics peppered with some sly, witty moments from Whitten
("I want to be alone unless the world collapses / Or I reverse
myself, you know I'm prone to lapses"). "Bad Timing"
has a Stones-meets-T.Rex feel, with Whitten sneering his verses
a la Lou Reed circa 1972, and Flaming Lips member Steven Drozd
providing great bar band piano fills, playing Nicky Hopkins to
Grand Mal's Rolling Stones. Meanwhile, there's a very nice hint
of Big Star in "Quicksilver", both with its chiming
guitars and Whitten's sweet lyrics ("My stupid heart loves
loud guitars / And girls with crooked grins"), while "Old
Fashioned" is just that, a greasy, trashy tune with more
of a glam influence, made all the more fun by Whitten's hilarious
wordplay: "I'm in love with this actress / She only fucks
black chicks / Though when she's stoned she likes dancing with
me / She says I look like a fascist / With my black moustaches
and my field jacket from 1963."
"Duty
Free" is a great, streetwise, New York Dolls imitation, circa
"Personality Crisis" ("She's standing on the corner
/ Smoking marijuana / Drinking Hi-C"), while the down-home
acoustic blooze jam "Flowin' Tide" is reminiscent of
those acoustic interludes on Let It Bleed. The dark,
gospel-tinged "Black Aura" pulls off that sound much
more easily than Primal Scream's ill-advised attempts at the same
sound a decade ago, while "Get Lost" is a terrific,
wistful, piano-driven portrait of the down-and-out ("You
look like a star / But you're living at the movies"). Bad
Timing peaks midway through with the masterful ballad "Disaster
Film", an extended stream-of-consciousness narrative by Whitten,
much like one of those drunken, world-weary ballads Mick and Keith
crafted so brilliantly in the late '60s and early '70s. Over a
sad piano, mournful guitars, and weepy mellotron, Whitten sings
about a dead friend and muses about his other friends who seem
to be on a similarly self-destructive path: Things he used to
say . . . all that talk in the bar at the end of the day / 'Cut
my ashes with cocaine, then dump 'em out of an airplane' / Flying
home to JFK, I got this lump in my throat that will not go away."
A
few of the songs on the album don't work as well, but Fridmann's
production and Whitten's fantastic lyric writing always keep thing
from getting too boring. A big problem with all the recent bands
resurrecting the sound of old-time hard rock is, though their
hearts are always in the right place, the songwriting seems to
be lacking, but in Grand Mal's case, that's not a problem at all.
With all the young bands trying to play louder than each other,
these black-clad New York veterans are more in tune with the subtleties
of playing honest rock music, and come the end of the year, after
the "The" bands have had their say, Bad Timing
should rank among the best of the year's crop of revivalist rock
'n' roll. Here's hoping their timing is good, for once.
—
Adrien Begrand, 8 April 2003
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