May 21, 2012
Merge to reissue Sugar catalog
Stream the new album by the Walkmen

May 18, 2012
Video: Alcest - "Les Voyages De L'Âme"
Antony and the Johnsons announce live album
Kurt Vile, Perfume Genius, others added to National-curated ATP
May 17, 2012
New York State Senate honors Adam Yauch
My Bloody Valentine announce Japan tour dates
May 16, 2012
R.I.P. Go-Go godfather Chuck Brown
Video: Feist - "Cicadas and Gulls"
Dirty Projectors reveal album art, deluxe release info
An Evening With Philip Glass and Joanna Newsom
Animal Collective Talk 'Centipede Hz'
May 15, 2012
Earlier this year, Black Lips released their live album Los Valientes Del Mundo Nuevo, an album that the band personally declared, on the record, no less, would go down in history as one of the best live recordings of all time. Raw, hedonistic and intense, it delivered on its promise, showing just how much ass a live record could kick, given the right treatment, in this case, clarity of recording enough to capture Black Lips' unhinged rock `n' roll madness. Keeping in mind that ensnaring the essence of one of the best live bands around on one record in their element is a difficult feat to best, Los Valientes' follow-up Good Bad Not Evil does just that, with the same energy and furious pursuit of creating a ruckus, with the added benefit of a little studio filter.
On Good Bad Not Evil, the Atlanta group more or less sticks to what they do best—meaty riffs, rebellious spirit, sexy swagger and anything required to have a good time. For the listener, however, all that's required to have a good time is a press of the play button, and voila!—instant destructive, drunken, disorienting and completely awesome house party. Leadoff track "Lean" makes that pretty apparent right off the bat, its treble-heavy riff driving a soulful punk rock groove, frontman Cole Alexander squealing like Mick Jagger filtered through an adolescent Henry Rollins.
"O Katrina!" name drops New Orleans, but isn't so much about an actual hurricane as it is a revved up ode to a mean girl, or so it would seem anyhow. "Veni Vidi Vici" is a surprising standout, a vibro-slap heavy dance number that finds a happy medium between Classic IV's "Spooky" and The Stone Roses' "Fool's Gold," hotly slithering in its sexy subtlety. "Navajo" is a love song to a "little Indian girl," kitschy and bouncy, sounding like a Southwestern battered garage rock tune straight out of the '60s. Another highlight comes in "Lock and Key," which is a bit more subdued than many of these guitar-blazing rockers, but makes up for it with infectious melodies and sheer intensity. For a bit of bizarre, uncomfortable humor, look no further than the country & western singalong "How Do You Tell a Child That Someone Has Died," in which Alexander awkwardly explains each person's demise between recitations of the chorus.
The Black Lips don't do things perfectly, and that's sort of the point—this is rock `n' roll, it's not meant to be perfect, right? Thing is, when the band completely lets loose and unleashes their junkyard punk stomp on "Step Right Up," no other word but `perfect' seems to describe that sublime, howling mess. It's paradoxical and it's complex, but it really doesn't have to be. It's rock `n' roll—it can be whatever the hell it wants to be.
Similar Albums:
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Oblivians - Popular Favorites
Sonics - Boom
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Jeff Terich
10.18.2007
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