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Written
by William Elgin, posted by blog admin
Legendary
Minneapolis New Wave/punk band The Suburbs re-emerged after two decades of
silence with 2013’s Si Sauvage and their latest studio recording, Hey Muse!, is
a ten song collection marking the seventh official studio release from this
band. The fact their reputation endured such a prolonged absence from the scene
and they’ve been able to bring old fans back into the fold while winning over a
new generation of admirers testifies to their abiding talents as musicians and
songwriters. The lineup is anchored by three key members – original keyboardist
and vocalist Chan Poling, original drummer Hugo Klaers, and long serving saxophonist
Max Ray, but they have recruited some five star cohorts to further flesh out
the lineup and those choices have proven crucial in reestablishing the band as
a renewed creative force. The Suburbs first formed in 1977, but they play with
the unabashed passion of a band formed months ago and hungry to make their
first album.
“Hey
Muse!” begins the album with, arguably, one of its most artful moments. The
lyrics for this track are written with a sparse, evocative style plumbing deep
into the heart of the song’s obvious subject and surround it with an evocative
array of guitars and tasteful keyboards. There’s some fun, raucous guitar on “Lost
You on the Dance Floor” augmented by some well placed keyboard color. The
straight ahead drumming sets an impressive, unwavering pulse for the song and
there’s definitely a retro feel about the song, seemingly culled from the band’s
eighties New Wave heyday, that’s given a completely modern context thanks to
the production. There’s a visceral clarity to the recording that helps it leap
out at listeners. “Lovers” has an unusual rhythm that’s likewise recorded in a
gripping way. The drums sound in your face and only recede during the verses.
There’s some deliciously raunchy horn playing coming in for brief flourishes
and Max Ray even gets a short turn in the spotlight. Poling seals it all with
another fine, emotive vocal.
“Can’t
Take You Back” comes out of the gate trotting along at a nice clip and largely
propelled by brass rave ups in between each vocal line. Hugo Klaers proves he's
as crucial to the success of this tune as he did on “Lovers”. “Unified Force”
moves along at hard sprint and comes off as much of an outright rock tune than
many of the other numbers on Hey Muse! The penultimate track “Butterfly” has almost
unbearable delicacy, but it never sounds self-consciously constructed. It shows
another side of the band’s musical personality ad their daring in allowing
their Muse to take her in whatever direction she deems fit. Her instinct is
unerring somehow. The ten songs on Hey Muse! reveal the band to be bottomless
regarding their depth and in full command of musical forms other bands of their
ilk and vintage wouldn’t dare attempt. The Suburbs never sound like a band
first formed 39 years ago. Instead, this sounds like a musical unit young, on
the streets, and eager to prove themselves.
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