Thursday, January 8, 2015

CD Odyssey Disc 694: Kings of Leon

Time for another music review, because that is what we do here on the CD Odyssey. This next one I would call ‘new music’ but the kids might say is ‘so last year’. Perspective is everything.

Disc 694 is…. Mechanical Bull
Artist: Kings of Leon

Year of Release: 2013

What’s up with the Cover? I think this is supposed to represent a neon sign over a honky tonk to let passersby know there is a mechanical bull on the premises. Like a hotel advertises free WiFi or a porn shop boasts that they also feature a peep show. Generally a big neon sign promoting any of these things is an indication you should just keep walking.

How I Came To Know It: Every now and then I try to put a CD in Sheila’s stocking.  This is one from Christmas 2013. I know Sheila likes Kings of Leon but I’m not a big fan, so that way I knew it was for her, not me. As is often the case, she thought it was OK but it didn’t blow her away. She loves music but doesn’t have the drive to own all of it like I do.

How It Stacks Up:  We only have two Kings of Leon albums; this one and 2003’s “Youth and Young Manhood.” Of the two, I prefer “Mechanical Bull.”

Rating: 3 stars

I didn’t love my previous exposure to Kings of Leon (2003’s “Youth and Young Manhood”) and one song into “Mechanical Bull” I thought I was in for more of the same.

The song was “Supersoaker” which is exactly the kind of directionless overproduced rock fare that make modern FM radio so unlistenable for me. This is a song that tries way too hard to be liked, like when an awkward person puts on a loud outfit to be noticed at a party, but then fidgets awkwardly all night. If you’re going to go loud, don’t fidget. That goes for music as well.

My concerns were quickly dispelled with the next song, “Rock City,” which has a southern fried, drugged out feeling driven by simple and laid back rock grooves. This song feels like a day where the main character never quite gets around to having a shower, because that day is just too full of gritty adventure. I’m not sure what it is entirely about, but it has some nice little lyrical nuggets including:

“I was running through the desert
I was looking for drugs
And I was search for a woman who was willing to love.”

Despite the appearance of an “Oh my my” that is far too close to Tom Petty’s identical utterance in “Last Dance with Mary Jane” the song retains its originality.

Speaking of Tom Petty, it is clear the Kings of Leon are influenced by him. Lead singer Caleb Followill’s vocals have the same strangled beauty that Petty’s possess, although likely with a bit more range. Hey, Tom’s getting older so there’s no shame in it.

Cross this Heartbreaker rock with phrasing that owes a lot to recent Pearl Jam and a healthy dose of Decemberist indie song construction and you’ve got the Kings of Leon. With these influences my biggest surprise is that I don’t like them more.

There is lots to like on “Mechanical Bull.” In addition to “Rock City” there is the gorgeous mid-tempo ballad “Beautiful War”; a pretty love song with a slow build that reminded me of U2 in their more honest moments.

Temple” has both an eighties guitar sound and a radio friendly structure that should have me hating it, but that somehow works. Again, the vocals make a huge difference. Here Caleb (since the whole band is composed of Followills first names are easier) shows he can climb high into falsetto and never lose emotional connection to the song. Also, it is a song about getting punched in the dome! I think.

I know getting punched in the dome is a meat-head expression, but it is also a guilty pleasure of mine (the expression, not literally getting punched). In fact, here is a picture of me having climbed to the top of the Duomo in Florence punching the dome…in the dome! Note I have adopted the requisite meat-headed expression for such activity.
But I digress…

Back to the album, which isn’t all roses. There are many songs where their propensity to sound like things that came before slips from ‘new blend’ into feeling derivative. This includes “Don’t Matter” which sounds like bad Pearl Jam and “Wait for Me” which I can’t specifically place, but sounds like every other bad song on the radio these days

Family Tree” is fun, playing with a bass-line that I suspect is a deliberate homage to Sly & the Family Stone’s “Thank You (Falettinme Be Mice Elf Agin)”. It adds a nice and unexpected funk to this indie/funk/post-grunge thing these guys have going on.

The album ends with the morose but touching “On the Chin” that sets just the right mood as the album winds down at a tasteful 11 songs and 42 minutes. Proof that modern records don’t have to all be 14-16 songs long.

This record didn’t blow me away but it was a pleasant surprise, and I have a feeling it will age well in coming years. I’ll certainly be playing it a lot more than I used to. A bit of a gift for me after all, but I swear it was an accident.

Best tracks: Rock City, Beautiful War, Temple, Family Tree, On the Chin

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