Surgery
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Artist: The Warlocks
Label: Mute U.S.
Category: Music
Average customer rating:
Format: Enhanced
Media: Audio CD
Number Of Discs: 1
UPC: 724596929520
EAN: 0724596929520
ASIN: B000A2H7EK
Release Date: 2005-08-23 |
Surgery
Related Categories:
General
| Alternative Rock
| Styles
| Music
Indie Rock
| Indie & Lo-Fi
| Alternative Rock
| Styles
| Music
Neo-Psychedelia
| Rock
| Alternative Styles
| Alternative Rock
| Styles
| Music
General
| Rock
| Styles
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Pop Rock
| Pop
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Tracks:
- Come Save Us
- It's Just Like Surgery
- Gypsy Nightmare
- Angels In Heaven, Angels In Hell
- We Need Starpower
- Thursday's Radiation
- Evil Eyes Again
- The Tangent
- Above Earth
- Bleed Without You Babe
- Suicide Note
Similar Items:
- Rise and Fall
- The Phoenix Album
- Feathers
- Then I Saw the Holy City
- Passover
Amazon.com
One of the few bands to give neo-psychedelia a good name, this Los Angeles-based band, have lifted the veil a little on their fuzzed-out Jesus and Mary Chain drones that colored their earlier two albums, cutting down some of the excessive white noise and equally excessive track lengths in an effort to be--dare we say--a little more accessible to the casual fan. But perhaps that careful editing of the Warlock's confused and messy muse had everything do with the fact that the band employed Tim Rothrock (Beck, Badly Drawn Boy) to man the boards on their third offering--and to his extreme credit, Rothrock has been able to streamline the Warlock's rare and idiosyncratic genius. Their odd occult hybrid of the Walkman, the Velvet Underground, Sonic Youth and the Shangri-La's produces brainy esoteric and unapologetic music that forces fans to wade through psychic lethargy, ennui, and abject depression--to get to the other side. But in that distant musical shore lays true enlightenment. Singer Bobby Hecksher doesn't shy away from telling the truth, whether it be his former druggy past, ("Come Save Us" "Bleed Without You Babe,") or the aftermath of crippling heartbreak ("Like Surgery"), or even living without hope ("Suicide Note"). But whatever the malaise, the Warlocks have prevailed with their strange, rude magic, continuing to cast a spell on listeners. -- Jaan Uhelszki
Customer Reviews:
They operate like no one else you know.......2006-07-28
"Surgery" is The Warlocks' line drawn in the sand.
On the other side are the 12-minute jams, sprawling acoustic psych freakouts ('House of Glass' from "Rise and Fall" as a prime example) and lo-fidelity sound quality that recalled both the sleazy English 80s (Spacemen 3 et al) and the late 60s Northwest garage rock scene.
On this side are shorter bursts of muscular and decisively riff-laden shards, and a noticeable improvement in sound quality.
Few bands could pull off such a staggering transformation, and Warlocks are one of them.
Where Warlocks sounded like true 60s revivalists on "Rise and Fall" and "Phoenix" they now sound like modern bands that cite the 60s as an influence but sound more like the 80s underground, i.e. Brian Jonestown Massacre, Dandy Warhols, BRMC.
The ultra-catchy 'Just Like Surgery' steals a page from the Jesus and Mary Chain's playbook but substitutes the howling feedback with mid-fretboard power chords and an infectious lead riff. This song alone is worth the price of admission.
Producer Tom Rothrock did some tinkering and brought lead 'Lock Bobby Hecksher's pop songwriting instincts to the fore, and to fairly astounding effect.
'Gypsy Nightmare' carries some atmospheric background guitar lines behind the din and 'Angels in Heaven...' is akin to a doo-wop send-up or prom night slow dance that lifts some notes from Modest Mouse's 'Sleepwalkin.'
'Thursday's Radiation' harkens back to the sprawling/shimmering dirges of previous albums and will satiate long-time fans while providing newbies a taste of what they've missed.
Unfortunately 'The Tangent' drops an anchor into the middle of the album (and I believe it's one of a few songs Hecksher wanted to leave off the album), but it's rescued by 'Evil Eyes Again' (JAMC-styled pop), 'Above Earth' (bottom of the well slowcore) and 'Bleed Without You Babe' (slow-paced two-note blues with guitar explosions), which are notable standouts. 'Suicide Note' closes the album with one of the Warlocks' patented expansive jam sessions, though it's cut in half and a slithering bonus track closes the last five minutes of the 12-minute running time.
A few misses here ('The Tangent' and 'We Need Starpower' seem tossed off rather than fleshed out), but there are enough bullseyes here to keep your attention and prod newcomers seek out the Warlocks' outstandig earlier efforts.
Not the critics, darling.......2006-02-25
I remember all the psycho-gothic drone bands of the 80's and 90's. I've got plenty of Spacemen 3, Love & rockets and Jesus and Mary Chain albums, etc. etc. I also can dig BJM and BRMC. I don't let it bother me that the Warlocks share black eyeliner with these bands. If you look around at all the reviews of this album, you may encounter alot of negative stuff about the Warlocks. Let it go. They are worth the price of admission. They trace a musical pedigree back past Velvet Underground and aren't afraid to do space doo-wop. There previous albums have sharper highs and more dangerous lows, but this album is grandiloquent. I've had it since the day it came out and I'm still listening to it every few days and I have a lot of CDs to chose from. Do yourself a favor if you like any of the bands I mentioned above. Get this one.
A very good indie rock album - close to classic - I think fans of the genre will like it a lot - 4.5 stars.......2006-01-11
The Warlocks' "Surgery" may not be the most accessible album in the world, but for what it is it's pretty good stuff. It's essentially lo-fi-ish indie rock with hard-edged guitars. Singer Bobby Hecksher is pretty likable most of the time, though on occasion he's a little questionable (see "The Tangent"). I think The Warlocks certainly have their own sound, but I would argue that it's not different or great enough to merit mass media attention. It's pretty derivative stuff with a couple relatively new ideas (see "Above Earth", especially). The production is pretty well done here. The lyrics tend to be hard to make out, but they're relatively interesting when you can hear them (they at least enhance the sound of the songs). Another good thing here is that every song on here is "good", though not necessarily hitworthy. Overall I think that hard-edged indie rock and The Warlocks fans will really like this, but I couldn't call it classic. It comes pretty darn close, though. It's still, however, highly recommended!
Highlights include:
the entire album!
Nothing new from neo-psych vets but ok for newcomers.......2005-11-19
This album has been touted as the one to hear by critics. They are probably grasping the coattails of the Brian Jonestown Massacre's related stagger onto a higher plane, so to speak, and a broader, post-"Dig" audience. I don't begrudge either band this notice, as a long-time fan. Still, when I listen to Warlocks albums, they do not greatly differ. They are more consistent than BJM and also tamer. Ex-BJMer Bobby H. and his neo-psychedelic cohorts follow here in the footsteps of Jesus & Mary Chain, more than a direct link back to the 60s pioneers.
But Bobby's voice can be painful to hear--his warbling "singing in the shower" tone does not do justice to whatever personal demons he exorcises. His delivery, admittedly very casual, lacks the personality that many other punk & psych singers conveyed despite similar limits and proudly displayed lack of training. Tracks 2 and 8 copy the chord changes (or absence thereof) of JMC so as to not even make them thoughtful limitations, so blatant and therefore lazy do these tunes sound. I was expecting, as with the Aislers Set (female-led, semi-obscure indie band from San Francisco marrying girl-group style to Joy Division's ambiance), a Ronettes-meet-the-Velvets coupling from what I had heard before listening to this CD, but I don't hear progression from their previous albums on Surgery.
This review is not meant to sound as overly negative as it may. If you have never heard this band, this is a good start. There's nothing here to turn off fans of the darker, neo-psych meets indie gloom cadre. But I found my attention wandering, and preferred it when the longer tracks departed from vocal terrain to explore--as in their earlier song "Jam of the Warlocks" on their self-titled e.p.--more of a space-rock, acid-tinged exploration. The songs here are too brief to allow high takeoff into such expansive realms, where the band's core of inspiration has in the past been more directly infused into their own grooves. I hope that future releases by this group combine their efficient craftsmanship with more imagination.
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